The Necklace by cheryl jarvis

the necklace

I heard about this book through my book club and was interested right from the start when I heard what it was about:

One day in Ventura, California, Jonell McLain saw a beautiful diamond necklace in a jewelry store window and wondered: Why are personal luxuries so plentiful yet accessible to so few? What if we shared what we desired? Several weeks, dozens of phone calls, and one great leap of faith later, Jonell and twelve other women bought the necklace together–to be passed along among them all.

The dazzling treasure weaves in and out of each woman’s life, reflecting her past, defining her present, making promises for her future. Lending sparkle in surprising and unexpected ways, the necklace comes to mean something dramatically different to each of the thirteen women. With vastly dissimilar histories and lives, they transcend their individual personalities and politics to join together in an uncommon journey–and what started as a quirky social experiment becomes something far richer and deeper.

For one, I love books about strong women.   Secondly – this is a true story of 13 women who bonded a friendship over this necklace.  I like friendships….

The stories within this book – tales from a necklace…. in some cases remarkable (like the money raised for charities), yet in many other cases – confusing.  The book is written giving each chapter a story about one of the women who wore it, but I did not feel the friendship between the women I was hoping for.  There was a lot of negotiating and bickering about the necklace, who could wear, in one case saying public promotion was taboo yet two chapters later it is exactly what they are doing.  We are talking about a $34,000 piece of jewelry that I would thing most of us (certainly myself) would not even consider at $1,000.

I am not a big jewelery fan, I could never see myself even considering to be part of something so costly.  Even though I love the whole concept about sharing an item that bonds you closer together… for me, this book was never about the necklace.  It was always about wanting to read how this group bonded, yet I close the book wondering if they ever really did.

I was initially very excited to review this book.  Yet, I actually had to rewrite this review because it still has left me a bit unsettled by the way it was written.  I seek comfort in the fact that while these women have many things going on in their lives that I find hard to relate too, the necklace did bring good to those whose lives it touched.

There were parts I loved and parts I just didnt feel made for the best reading.  This book rates a below average read from me.

Angels and Demons by Dan Brown

I had a couple books that I had read a while ago that have recently become movies so I thought it would be fun to blogangels on them as I had read these books before I even knew what blogging was.  One of these books is My Sisters Keeper (see review below this post)…. the other, Angels and Demons.

I like to call my book club the Bookies – ahead of their time.  In 2005 we read this book and chose it as our best book we read that year.  Now in 2009, it is a movie.  Apparently we werent the only ones that thought it was pretty darn good.

Prior to my blogging debut, I wrote all the books I read into a three rng binder and kept reviews there.  No kidding.  I have wrote everything I have read and my thoughts (reviews) long before I ever knew that I would one day be doing it publically.  I have everything I have read since 2002.

Harvard symbologist Robert Langdon is shocked to find proof that the legendary secret society, the Illuminati–dedicated since the time of Galileo to promoting the interests of science and condemning the blind faith of Catholicism–is alive, well, and murderously active. Brilliant physicist Leonardo Vetra has been murdered, his eyes plucked out, and the society’s ancient symbol branded upon his chest. His final discovery, antimatter, the most powerful and dangerous energy source known to man, has disappeared–only to be hidden somewhere beneath Vatican City on the eve of the election of a new pope. Langdon and Vittoria, Vetra’s daughter and colleague, embark on a frantic hunt through the streets, churches, and catacombs of Rome, following a 400-year-old trail to the lair of the Illuminati, to prevent the incineration of civilization.

Here are my original thoughts on this book:

January 22, 2005:  Once again I have experienced a great read by Dan Brown.  My first experience was last summer when I read The Davinchi Code which was a fantastic read.  Now reading Angels and Demons for our book club, I see similarities in his writing style.  Robert Langdon (same main character in both books), is called tot eh scene of a crime at the Vatican.  I really enjoy reading about the Vatican = what a beautiful and mysterious place.  Breda, in our book club has visited there and had pictures at the review.  BREATH TAKING!

I actually finished reading this book on the plane to Costa Rica on our family vacation.  I gave it to a person who I met onthe plane, a fellow reader and I have to share good reads!

(Update 6/23/2009)  Looking at my old review I see I left out my favorite part of the book, and that was the library.  I remember reading about the library of rare important books, air pressurized, temperature control and guarded in a locked glass room….  I thought if I could only have 10 minutes in that room to breathe in those books….  (much the same feeling I had when I watched the movie National Treasure with Nicholas Cage and they were in the rare library room…bookies awards

As for the movie, I found it a slight disappointment as I had with Davinchi Code as well.  Not really important to the book perspective, but I have to mention that Tom Hanks was not what I pictured of our character Robert Langdon.  Granted, he looked better in Angels and Demons.  I think what disappointed me the most is the fact of how easy it all comes together in the movie version.  In the book you go through a long interesting process of clues and codes… wrong turns and deep plot… in the movie its like they turn a corner and it is just magically there.

The book, then and now rated a great fiction read.  I would recommend not judging this book by the movie.  Read the book.

My Sisters Keeper by Jodi Picoult

My book club read this in 2006…. (pre blogging) I was still at that time journaling everything I read in sisters keppera large three ring binder.  The book turned out to be voted on as the book book we read of that year and I have that in my library on a plaque.  I love that three years ago that we had chosen a book to be the best book we had read that year as a group is now going to be a movie.  It’s not the first time we have done that…. but hey, thats a whole other blog post.

So – with the movie coming out soon, I thought I would dust off my notes on this book and blog review it at this time, using my thoughts from three years ago.  This was, at that time, the first Jodi Piccoult most of had ever read.

The difficult choices a family must make when a child is diagnosed with a serious disease are explored with pathos and understanding in this 11th novel by Picoult (Second Glance, etc.). The author, who has taken on such controversial subjects as euthanasia (Mercy), teen suicide (The Pact) and sterilization laws (Second Glance), turns her gaze on genetic planning, the prospect of creating babies for health purposes and the ethical and moral fallout that results. Kate Fitzgerald has a rare form of leukemia. Her sister, Anna, was conceived to provide a donor match for procedures that become increasingly invasive. At 13, Anna hires a lawyer so that she can sue her parents for the right to make her own decisions about how her body is used when a kidney transplant is planned. Meanwhile, Jesse, the neglected oldest child of the family, is out setting fires, which his firefighter father, Brian, inevitably puts out. Picoult uses multiple viewpoints to reveal each character’s intentions and observations, but she doesn’t manage her transitions as gracefully as usual; a series of flashbacks are abrupt. Nor is Sara, the children’s mother, as well developed and three-dimensional as previous Picoult protagonists. Her devotion to Kate is understandable, but her complete lack of sympathy for Anna’s predicament until the trial does not ring true, nor can we buy that Sara would dust off her law degree and represent herself in such a complicated case. Nevertheless, Picoult ably explores a complex subject with bravado and clarity, and comes up with a heart-wrenching, unexpected plot twist at the book’s conclusion.

(as written on 9/8/2006) This book?  Fantastic!  Jodi Picoult has an incredible gift with words.  Her writing keeps you on the edge of your seat, the court case felt so real I may as well have been juror #1, hanging on every word.   This book gives a different twist to sisters Kate and Anna.  Kate has leukemia and Anna, her younger sister is born to supply Kate with the much needed bone marrow and blood cells that Kate needs.  When Anna turns 13… she hires a lawyer for rights to her own body.  This book makes you love, and it makes you hate.  It deals with moral issues and matetrs of the heart.  On a 1 to 5 rating I give it a 7+!  READ IT.  YOU WILL LOVE IT.

(Today – 6/23/3009)  As we all know by now, Jodi Picoult is not a one hit wonder author.  Her name is well known for her incredible writing skills and her way of taking a hot topic and putting a twist on it so you see the whole thing from a different view point.  In my book, she is a must read.

I will add an update to this post after I have seen the movie.  I have seen the previews, which brought it all back, and they made me cry…. can’t wait to see what the movie does to me.

From Pain To Peace by Pat Bluth (a review…)

pain to peaceAs I had mentioned in an earlier post, my friend Adrienne and I biked to Nisswa last week to hear Pat Bluth speak about her book, from Pain to Peace.

Anger will eat away at your soul. It can turn to deep depression and can be emotionally debilitating. Bitterness and unforgiveness are emotional suicides that inflict constant pain and steal joy. When you reach this depth of despair—when life seems like it will never be good again—how do you go on? How do you overcome a rage that burns like a volcano?

Pat Bluth was that volcano. After the death of her teenage daughter by a drunk driver, Pat Bluth wanted revenge when he was let off with a mere slap on the wrist. From Pain to Peace is her compelling story, tracing her journey from rage to forgiveness and healing.

From Pain to Peace is for everyone who has known pain or experienced loss. It will be welcomed by anyone who is looking for an example to follow, a proven path to find spiritual healing. It is a story of tragedy, but it is also a story of great joy. Pat discovered a joy and an intimacy with God she never knew possible. She came to experience his love and peace beyond measure.

I went to school with Pat’s daughter Tammy who had been killed by the drunk driver in 1985.  I was there the night of the accident and was one of the many teenagers who witnessed what happened.  Due to all this, I was anxious to hear Pat’s take on the book and her feelings after all these years.

Having been through my own tragedy of losing my mom and step dad in a head on collision in 1996 due to another driver crossing into their lane – this review takes on a bit of a personal feel for me.

I found From Pain to Peace to be brutally honest.  Pat pours out her heart in this book from the immense despair, to the extreme anger and hate that can fill your heart.  Having felt many of the emotions that Pat did, I could relate well with this book.  What Pat says through the healing process is all the things I wish I could have expressed.

Pats journey through the tough times into God’s grace and healing is reflected well in this book.  At times, her grief caught in my own throat as I remembered all to well what it felt like to be on that treadmill….constantly having to move forward, feeling if you stopped to breathe…. to think even…. you would slip off the end into a dark abyss.

Pat’s words in her chapter on mourning I found also to be right on.  The constantly being asked, “How are you?” Turns into a response that is automatic as we guard our heart against the real truth of how we are…. as if speaking it out loud would cause us to shatter into a million tiny pieces.  Pat’s response was, “Fine.”  I remember mine was, “I am o.k.”

Pat Bluth’s book is an incredible testimony of God’s healing.  I would recommend this book to anyone who has had a tragic loss of someone close to them.  I think you will find comfort in these pages.  Thank you Pat for sharing this healing book.

1 O LORD, You have searched me and known me.
2 You know my sitting down and my rising up;
You understand my thought afar off.
3 You comprehend my path and my lying down,
And are acquainted with all my ways.
4 For there is not a word on my tongue,
But behold, O LORD, You know it altogether.
5 You have hedged me behind and before,
And laid Your hand upon me.
6 Such knowledge is too wonderful for me;
It is high, I cannot attain it.

7 Where can I go from Your Spirit?
Or where can I flee from Your presence?
8 If I ascend into heaven, You are there;
If I make my bed in hell, behold, You are there.

Size 2 For Life by Ashley Marriott and Marc L Paulsen, MD

size 2Size 2 For Life:

Product Description
We didn’t start life as a size 8, 12, 16 or more. So how did we get here? Well, the simple truth is we ate, and we ate, and we ate! So how do we turn things around and get back to the way we deserve? Size 2 for Life shows us how. Presented in clear and easily understood language this amazingly simple new diet and fitness program can make and keep almost any woman a size 2. Included are simple tests to gauge ones current status, a complete diet and exercise program as well as the 21-Day, 2 for Life, quick-start plan for rapid results. Renowned fitness expert, Ashley Marriott and Stanford trained, Dr. Marc Paulsen are on a mission to get people fit and look the way they truly can.

I am always reading something on nutrition or exercise.  It’s just the way I am wired.  I work hard to keep my weight down, but I am human and I struggle like most people to come up with a happy medium.

1.  Eat a well balanced diet.

2.  Exercise

3.  Avoid late night eating.

While this is the backbone of all diet/fitness books, our authors take it a step further and actually give you the tools you need to  break the habits of over eating and poor choice eating.

I did enjoy some of the encouragement given throughout the book, such as how to handle the relative or friend that says, “Oh come on, look at you!  You can have a piece of cake!” There are also pages of charts that show you for your age and height where you should be at physically.

The book takes you through a 21 day menu plan as well as exercise ideas.  I do like that it encourages you to take it slow… this is not a quick fix, this is a life time change of how you look at food and how you do life.

I would say a good read.  There are several articles that are well written for anyone who is serious about making a change.


Dragon House by John Shors

Dragon HouseI just received in the mail the new John Shors book, Dragon House,  to review before the September 2009 release date.  Having worked with street kids in Honduras, I am excited to see what John has to offer in this read.


Dragon House tells the tale of Iris and Noah—two Americans who, as a way of healing their own painful pasts, open a center to house and educate Vietnamese street children. In the slums of a city that has known little but war for generations, Iris and Noah befriend children who dream of nothing more than of going to school, having a home, and being loved. Learning from the poorest of the poor, the most silent of the unheard, Iris and Noah find themselves reborn. Resounding with powerful themes of suffering, sacrifice, friendship, and love, Dragon House brings together East and West, war and peace, and celebrates the resilience of the human spirit.Best read 2009

Every once in a while a book comes along that is written so well that the words wrap around you a nd carry you through page by page.  This is such a book.

Dragon House is a fiction book themed around Vietnam street children.  Having worked with street kids in Honduras since 2004, I was amazed to see the likeness between these two areas of the world.  John Shors captures the street children’ life in his words, words that at times hit so close to home that I could see and smell what he was describing. I was able to get a real sense of Vietnam and feel the hope that comes with a place that works towards a world without children living on the street.

Well written, a real page turner.  I will definitely be looking for more books from this author.  Dragon House will be available to purchase in September of 2009:

Amazon

Barnes and Noble

**Here is a link to more information about Dragon House and the homeless children John is trying to support.  Please check it out, this is an amazing thing that he is doing.   Click here

Walking in Circles Before Lying Down by merrill markoe

walkingThis is our June book club read.  I just got the book in my hand today and have to admit that I am skeptical going in.  I hate to say that because I try to keep an open mind on our book choices – and I really am hoping that the book proves me wrong….

Stay tuned…

Twice-divorced Dawn is the product of a fantastically dysfunctional family (Dawn’s sister, Halley, is an overly enthusiastic life coach, her mother is a struggling entrepreneur and her former smalltime rockabilly musician father invests “a lot of time into perfecting… authentic fifties outfits”); her dog, Chuck, begins talking to her after dud radio-DJ boyfriend Paxton dumps her. Though other dogs can also suddenly communicate with Dawn (including Johnny Depp, a friend’s dog), Chuck remains the leading pooch as he plies his master with sage advice and astute observations—”He seemed humpy,” Chuck opines about one suitor; “Who doesn’t like puppies? That’s psychotic,” he muses about Paxton—as she negotiates the standard fare of chick lit (losing her job, getting mixed up with wacky beaus, aiding her friends through their respective crises, finding a place to live). Until, that is, Chuck runs away, forcing Dawn to realize her true love may not be a biped. Off-beat enough to stand out of the pack.

The book gave me a “Janet Evanovich” feel almost from the start.  The quirky too involved family members rang a little too “Stephanie Plumisk” for me and while I am well aware of the great following the Plum series has drawn… I am not one of the fans.

I do have to admit that this book while in parts offensive (Halley dating Scott Peterson hit me as tasteless and insensitive)… there were other times I caught myself laughing out loud with some of the humor.

Overall the book was a skimmer.  I did not find any likable characters – not even the dogs.  The only person I think I liked  was Collin.  The ending tied up a few wildly loose ends but the overall point of the book was missed, at least by me.  I can’t rate this beyond a 2.5.

June 14 (update from our Bookies book club review):  Our book club met last week to review this read.  It is always fun to see if it just me when I find a book “incredible!” or “disappointing!”  In this case, while for the most part we all agreed that this book was not in the running for our Bookies read of the year, the group found it a  slightly below average read.

A couple of the girls rated it extremely low… agreeing that character development was not strong, the book had no real plot… to a few of the girls finding it just a humorous fun read that you don’t take too seriously just enjoy.


Between the Tides by Patti Callahan Henry

cover_between_tides-743926Until age 12, Catherine “Cappy” Leary lives, grows and plays with the neighboring Loughlin family in the South Carolina lowcountry town of Seaboro. After the accidental death of the Loughlins’ youngest son, a tragedy for which Catherine blames herself, her father moves the family across the state. Fast forward to Catherine’s 30th birthday, when she reluctantly returns to Seaboro for the first time in 18 years to scatter her father’s ashes. As she reconnects, she uncovers new information about her father’s ties to the area that help her release her guilt and learn to love freely. Henry’s warm, smoothly paced novel explores well-traveled themes of reconciliation and rebirth with fresh energy.

I think I found this one at a garage sale.  I found the book not a very good read.  The flashbacks were way too frequent and with every current happening it seemed the author had to take us back to the 12 year old Cappy to relive it…  there were times in the book I had to pause to get a grip on if the author was talking current time or the past.  A lot of the time the clues to this were if the conversation included Cappy’s dad who was not dead, so then I knew we were once again flashing back.  Due to this continuous “where are we now” flashes, I found it hard to really get into the characters or the story.  I did not find the characters to be well defined and could not get a real picture of who Cappy (Cathryn) was as a person or even what she looked like.  The best description I recall is that she was attractive – color of hair, length, eyes, etc…. I have no idea.

You may be wondering why I bothered to finish the book and i wish I had a really inteligent answer here – but I don’t.  I just kept plugging along – perhaps to see if Cappy was strong enough to stay away from her obviously wrong for her boyfriend…. maybe to see who she wound up with – or maybe to find out the mystery behind Sam…. for what ever reason it was, I need not have bothered… none of the answers were fulfilling to my imagination.

C-

Handle With Care by Jodi Picoult

handle-with-careIn a small New Hampshire town lives a family of four: Dad is a cop; Mom was once a professional pastry chef who now spends her time taking care of two daughters. Amelia is a somewhat troubled preteen; Willow is a 5-year-old with a rare genetic disease, osteogenesis imperfecta (OI), type III. And everything else about this family and everything about this novel spins back to that genetic mutation: Willow’s bones don’t form properly. By the time she was born, she had seven broken bones, which had been seen on ultrasound; four more got broken during the delivery; and by now, five years later, her whole family speaks the language of Willow’s vulnerable bones. Everyone knows the sound and the look of another one breaking. This is why Amelia feels left out and angry and self-hating by turns, and this is why the mother’s days are a constant challenge of caretaking and advocacy and worry. And this is what’s so good about Jodi Picoult’s “Handle With Care.” When I was doing my residency in pediatrics (at the same children’s hospital where Willow goes for her experimental therapy, which may strengthen her bones but may also have bad side effects years down the line), I was awed by the parents of children with chronic diseases like OI. They seemed to me a fascinating, heroic and almost completely invisible part of the population, recognizing one another, telling their astounding stories, “going to medical school the hard way,” as we sometimes called it. Why were there not novels and movies and ballads to celebrate their love and their determination and their very particular side of the story? Well, here’s such a novel. It’s well written, it’s conscientiously researched and, most important, it presents a character who is a child instead of a disability personified. With her strong personality and weak bones, Willow is a 5-year-old who knows too much. She’s jealous of what other children can do. The action of “Handle With Care” begins when Willow’s mother, Charlotte, decides to bring a suit against her own best friend, the obstetrician who took care of her during the pregnancy. It’s a “wrongful life” suit, arguing that if the diagnosis of osteogenesis imperfecta had been made at the first prenatal ultrasound, she would have been able to make the decision to terminate the pregnancy at 18 weeks. Instead, the suit argues, the obstetrician missed certain subtle signs, and that diagnosis wasn’t made till the 27-week ultrasound revealed those seven broken bones. By that time, Charlotte and her husband were unwilling to consider a late-term abortion. Everyone around Charlotte is opposed to this lawsuit. Her husband won’t have any part of it. Her older daughter is destroyed by it, inside and out, and loses her best friend, the obstetrician’s daughter. Willow herself is devastated, correctly understanding that her mother is claiming that it would have been better if she had never been born. The organized osteogenesis imperfecta community is furious. When Charlotte takes her daughter to an OI convention, Willow is overjoyed to be in a group where she’s normal, but finds that her mother is a pariah. Even Charlotte’s lawyer, a young woman on a quest to locate her birth mother, doesn’t like the smell of this wrongful-birth suit. With the deck stacked against Charlotte, it’s sometimes hard to feel much sympathy for her. And yet, this mother is caught between the genuine love she feels for her child, to whom she has devoted herself completely, and the anger she feels at what has happened to her life: “What if it was someone’s fault?” she thinks. “How could I admit to anyone — much less myself — that you were not only the most wonderful thing that had ever happened to me . . . but also the most exhausting, the most overwhelming?” Yes, the money she hopes to win could buy her daughter the best wheelchairs, the best summer camps, but for the sake of wringing that money out of the system, she destroys her closest friend, alienates her older daughter, horrifies her husband and damages the child she’s trying to help. You don’t have to be a physician, with a somewhat jaundiced view of the personal-injury tort system, to wish Charlotte could see what every other character can see — that she is creating a new and terrible tragedy. Charlotte’s motivation for the lawsuit, which will endanger if not ruin everything she loves, is that she needs money to take proper care of her daughter. I couldn’t help remembering my old days at the hospital and the families who would make their way down from New Hampshire, a state notoriously limited in the services it provided to children with disabilities. Those parents all made the same dark joke, quoting the Revolutionary War slogan on their license plates: “Live free or die.” “Handle With Care” is a great read, with strong characters, an exciting lawsuit to pull you along and really good use of the medical context. Picoult does a terrific job of evoking OI and its peculiarities — from the likelihood that parents might be accused of child abuse (because of fractures that don’t “make sense”) to the incessant push and pull of wanting a child to experience kindergarten friendships, Disney World and ice skating, while worrying constantly that another fragile bone will break.

In typical Picoult style, Jodi once again takes an incredible story into a real life case for us to tear through her pages wanting to know what is going to happen.  Again, she does not disappoint.  Willow is such a lovable little girl with a quick wit and a smile to match…. its hard to imagine what a life would be like with her…. let alone…. without her.

This book takes you into the depth of a families struggles to get by with a severely handicapped daughter who needs full-time care not only now at age 5… but there s a good chance for the rest of her life.  When Charlotte (the mother) decides to sue the doctor for not letting her know earlier of the child’s handicap, the book just takes on wings as the doctor is also Charlotte’s best friend, Piper. Then take it from Willow’s sister Amelia’s view where her parents are so engrossed with Willow and all her needs that she feels left out, uncared for, during her early teenage years.

This book will make you struggle with who you agree with, and in my case, that opinion changes as you go through the book first angry, then hopeful…. I think I went through every emotion I have.

While the ending threw me a bit for a loop – I wont go into details as you have to – HAVE TO – read this book.  Jodi Picoult is an amazing writer, her court cases make you feel like you have a front row seat and hand on to it tight, because when it comes to Picoult, you are in for something special.

5+!!!!!

The Wednesday Sisters by Meg Waite Clayton

TheWednesdaySisters_300_450The Wednesday Sisters: Set during the summer of 1968 in Palo Alto, California, Clayton’s novel chronicles the lives of five women who conduct a weekly writing group at their neighborhood park. Frankie is an unassuming midwesterner whose inventor husband brings them to the burgeoning Silicon Valley. She meets Linda, the all-American athlete; Kath, the southern belle; Brett, the enigmatic scientist; and Ally, the shy bohemian. The women share their feelings about marriage and motherhood and together mourn the assassination of Robert Kennedy and watch as man walks on the moon and feminists protest the Miss America pageant. They support one another through illness, infertility, racism, and infidelity—and encourage each other through publishers’ rejections. Readers will be swept up by this moving novel about female friendship and enthralled by the recounting of a pivotal year in American history as seen through these young women’s eyes.

I stumbled upon this book while looking for something to recommend to our book club for May.  I loved the fact that the book was about strong women and apparently a bit before their time.  I excitedly brought it into the vote but it did not win.

I could not let it go so I used the gift card I received from Brad and Justin for Mother’s day to purchase this among a few other treasures.  I brought it with to the cabin for Memorial Weekend and devoured it word for word.

This book featured excellent characters that I not only could relate too, but almost wished that i too could be a Wednesday Sister and join them as they discuss children and husbands, lives and dreams.  I loved that they all tried their hand at writing… I loved Linda’s strong personality, Kath’s sweet heart, Ally’s insecurities, Brett’s secret heartache, and Frankie’s wisdom.  These five made a group that was a delight to read about!  I even pulled a couple ideas out of the book to use for our book club including one great idea to have a “come as your favorite fiction character” party.  I already know who I will be……

There was a line in the book (of course I can’t find it now) that talked about how most women are lucky to have even one really close friend in a lifetime… I really thought about this and it is true.  I am blessed to have many friends through the years that I would say I am very close too.  What a great gift friendship is.

I enjoyed this book and will be looking for more from this author.  her characters were alive and real and what a privilege to spend time with these amazing women! A HIGH FIVE rating!  I will be bringing this to book club again for another try!

See Meg Waite Clayton’s website here ***Also – see where Meg added part of this review to her website!!! (Thanks Meg!)