Witchyrichy (aka Karen) Wades Into Reading In 2023 - Thread #3

Talk75 Books Challenge for 2023

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Witchyrichy (aka Karen) Wades Into Reading In 2023 - Thread #3

1witchyrichy
Edited: Oct 1, 11:10 am



Welcome to my third thread! I am Karen Richardson, aka Witchyrichy, and this is my 9th year in the 75ers group. I am mostly retired from public life although I do a bit of teaching related to educational technology and instructional design for a few clients. Otherwise, when I wake up on Monday mornings, I can pretty much do what I want. And, often what I want to do is read!

Fall has arrived here at the farm. It is my favorite time of year: just warm enough for read on the porch without so much gardening to do!

I live with my husband of 31 years, Bob, and Circe the cat, in a 19th century farmhouse on 18 acres in rural southeast Virginia. The picture above is the view from our front porch. The former owner was working on making the front yard into an arboretum so there is an interesting collection of trees including a gingko.

Bottle Tree Farm, as we call it, is our own little bit of paradise and came with a library for my books, which helps make up for the challenges of living in an old house. The books also spill out into every other room of the house. My major goal this year is to read the books I already own (lots and lots of ROOTS) and start clearing the shelves a bit.

Besides reading, I garden, crochet and play music as my main hobbies. I reignited my blog last year when I retired and plan to publish more posts in 2023. My husband and I share a love for the outdoors including birding.

I am looking forward, once again, to sharing my life and reading with this wonderful group of people!

2witchyrichy
Oct 1, 11:07 am

4witchyrichy
Edited: Oct 13, 10:13 am



A book about a topic you don’t usually read: Alex's Adventures in Numberland by Alex Bellos
The next book in a series you started: Friends in High Places by Donna Leon
A book that taught you something: The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness by Michelle Alexander
Switched or stolen identities: The Third Girl by Agatha Christie
With a book on the cover: The Words Between Us by Erin Bartels
A book rated above 4 on LT: The Book of Joy by Dalai Lama
Book is set on a plane, train or ship: The Unsinkable Greta James by Jennifer E. Smith
A bestseller from 20 years ago: Angry Housewives Eating Bon Bons by Lorna Landvik
STEM topic
Inn or hotel: Christmas at the Island Hotel by Jennifer Colgan
Journalist or journalism: Like a Rolling Stone: A Memoir by Jann Wenner
Small town or rural setting: The Day the World Came to Town by Jim Defede
Read a CAT: I Must Betray You by Ruth Sepetys (January GEOCat)
Title contains a number or quantity: The 1619 Project
Book by a local/regional author where you live/have lived: The Virginia Plan by Robert Gillette
Author who shares your zodiac sign: Rebecca by Daphne Du Maurier
A popular author’s first book: Light a Penny Candle by Maeve Binchy
Art or craft related
Written by an author under 30: The Luminaries by Eleanor Catton
A memoir: Dinners With Ruth: A Memoir on the Power of Friendships by Nina Totenberg
Features a cat (cats) or member of the cat family (leopard, lion, tiger, etc.): The Cat Who Could Read Backwards by Lillian Jackson Braun
Involves an accident: The Endless Beach by Jennifer Colgan
More than 1000 copies on LT: The Silver Branch by Rosemary Sutcliff
With a plant in the title or on the cover: Riders of the Purple Sage by Zane Grey
Music or musician: The Violin Conspiracy by Brendan Slocumb

5witchyrichy
Edited: Oct 2, 12:41 pm

January - March 51

January - 21
Silent in the Grave by Deanna Raybourn
The Eagle of the Ninth by Rosemary Sutcliff
The Christmas Shop by Jennifer Colgan
A Murderous Grudge by J.M. Roberts
I Must Betray You by Ruth Sepetys
Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm by Kate Douglas Wiggin
The Silver Branch by Rosemary Sutcliff
The Lantern Bearers by Rosemary Sutcliff
South to America by Imani Perry
The Third Girl by Agatha Christie
The Day the World Came to Town by Jim Defede
Christmas at the Island Hotel by Jenny Colgan (audio)
Bloodlines by Fred D'Aguiar (analog)
Book Lovers by Emily Henry
The Virginia Plan by Robert H. Gillette
Friends in High Places by Donna Leon (audio)
The Words Between Us by Erin Bartels
Hello Lighthouse by Sophie Blackall
The Adventures of Robin Hood by Howard Pyle (analog)
I Should Be Extremely Happy in Your Company by Brian Hall
A Sea of Troubles by Donna Leon (audio)

February 15

Switchboard Soldiers by Jennifer Chiaverini
21st Century Balance by Mark H. Law
The Café by the Sea by Jennifer Colgan (audio)
The Killing At Badger's Drift by Caroline Graham
The Endless Beach by Jennifer Colgan (audio)
The Book of Joy by Dalai Lama XIV
An Island Christmas by Jennifer Colgan (audio)
Angle of Repose by Wallace Stegner
The Falcon's Malteser by Anthony Horowitz
Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil by John Berendt
The Awakening by Kate Chopin
Two Old Women by Velma Wallis
The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness by Michelle Alexander
The Librarian of Crooked Lane by C.J. Archer (audio)
The Last Kingdom by Steve Berry

March 15

An Island Wedding by Jennifer Colgan
Honeycomb by Joanne M. Harris
Wilful Behavior by Donna Leon
The King's Inquisitor by Tonya Ulynn Brown
A Woman of No Importance by Sonia Purnell
The Madwoman Upstairs by Catherine Lowell
A Feather on the Water by Lindsay Jayne Ashford
The Little Beach Street Bakery by Jenny Cogan
Summer at the Little Beach Street Bakery by Jenny Colgan
Remarkable Creatures by Tracy Chevalier
Clock Dance by Anne Tyler
The Doomsday Book by Connie Willis
Uniform Justice by Donna Leon
Doctored Evidence by Donna Leon
The Goddess Effect by Sheila Yasmin Manikar

6witchyrichy
Edited: Oct 13, 11:00 am

Apr - June 53

April 15

Moriarty by Anthony Horowitz
Murder on the Pneumatic Railway by Lisa M. Lane
The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins
The Head Trip: Adventures on the Wheel of Consciousness by Jeff Warren
The Book of Esther: A Commentary and History by Benjamin J. Segal
Socrates by Francesco Barilli and Alessandro Ranghiasci (I don't think this one has made it into LT yet so I may need to add it. It is a graphic book from Comixology.)
Wondrous Encounters: Scripture for Lent by Richard Rohr
Blood From a Stone by Donna Leon
Mystic Tea by Rea Nolan Martin
Garment of Shadows by Laurie King (audio)
The Trackers: A Novel by Charles Frazier
Final Chapter by Pam Stucky
Why Woo Woo Works by David R. Hamilton
At the Edge of the Orchard by Tracy Chevalier
The House of Silk by Anthony Horowitz

May 20

Dreaming Spies by Laurie R. King (audio)
A Conventional Murder by Pam Stucky
The Overstory by Richard Powers
Through a Glass, Darkly by Donna Leon (audio)
Freeing Jesus: Rediscovering Jesus as Friend, Teacher, Savior, Lord, Way,… by Diana Butler Bass
Real Life: The Journey from Isolation to Openness and Freedom by Sharon Salzberg
Suffer the Little Children by Donna Leon (audio)
The Forest Unseen by David George Haskell
Paper Cuts by Ellery Adams (audio)
Someone Else's Shoes by Jojo Moyes
The Library of the Dead by Tendai Huchu
The Girl of His Dreams by Donna Leon (audio)
About Face by Donna Leon (audio)
The Shunning by Beverly Lewis
The Confession by Beverly Lewis
The Crossing Places by Elly Griffiths
The Janus Stone by Elly Griffiths
The House At Sea's End by Elly Griffths
The Reckoning by Beverly Lewis
The Medici Manuscript by C.J. Archer

June 18
Soul Boom by Rainn Wilson
Long Summer Day by R. F. Delderfield
Alex's Adventures in Numberland by Alex Bellos
The Matter of Wales by Jan Morris
Drawing Conclusions by Donna Leon (audio)
The Marriage of Mary Russell by Laurie R. King (audio)
Everything Belongs: The Gift of Contemplative Prayer by Richard Rohr
Bees and Their Keepers by Lotte Möller
Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus
Courage, My Love by Kristin Beck
The City of Falling Angels by John Berendt
Beastly Things by Donna Leon (audio)
Riders of the Purple Sage by Zane Grey
The Evening and the Morning by Ken Follett
The Venice Sketchbook by Rhys Bowen
Elektra by Jennifer Saint
The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller
The Enchanted April by Elizabeth Von Arnim

7witchyrichy
Edited: Oct 13, 11:01 am

July - September 40

July 13

The Luminaries by Eleanor Catton
The Murderer's Apprentice by Daryl Anderson
The Little Italian Hotel by Phaedra Patrick (audio)
The Messy Lives of Book People by Phaedra Patrick (audio)
Small Rain by Madeleine L'Engle
Ghosts Walk The Shenandoah by Daryl Anderson
The Library of Lost and Found by Phaedra Patrick (audio)
Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan (audio)
Light a Penny Candle by Maeve Binchy
The Golden Egg by Donna Leon (audio)
The Porcelain Maker by Sarah Freethy
The Queen of the Big Time by Adriana Trigiani
Back to Yoga by Steve Kelley

August 15

The Echo of Old Books by Barbara Davis
Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros
Murder in the Book Lover's Loft by Ellery Adams
Firefly Summer by Maeve Binchy
Fearless Jones by Walter Moseley
By Its Cover by Donna Leon
Angry Housewives Eating Bon Bons by Lorna Landvik
The Fifth Season by N. K. Jemison
The Violin Conspiracy by Brendan Slocumb
The Southern Lawyer by Peter O'Mahoney
Just One Damned Thing After Another by Jodi Taylor
Bruno, Chief of Police by Martin Walker
The Cat Who Could Read Backwards by Lillian Jackson Braun
Carter Beats the Devil by Glen David Gould
A Question of Belief by Donna Leon

September 12

September by Rosamunde Pilcher
Like a Rolling Stone: A Memoir by Jann Wenner
The Unsinkable Greta James by Jennifer E. Smith
What Makes Us Human by Jasmine Wang, Iain S. Thomas, and GPT-3
The Dark Vineyard by Martin Walker (audio)
Black Diamond by Martin Walker (audio)
The Crowded Grave by Martin Walker (audio)
The Murmur of Bees by Sofia Segovia
Rebecca by Daphne Du Maurier
The Last Devil to Die by Richard Osman
The Devil's Cave by Martin Walker
Dinners with Ruth by Nina Totenberg

9PaulCranswick
Oct 1, 11:49 am

I hope I am not too early to wish you a happy new thread, Karen.

That is a lovely topper up above.

10figsfromthistle
Oct 1, 8:22 pm

Happy new thread!

>1 witchyrichy: What a beautiful topper!

11BLBera
Oct 2, 9:22 am

Happy new thread, Karen. I love the photo at the top! What a lovely setting.

12witchyrichy
Oct 2, 10:58 am

>9 PaulCranswick: You are just fine, as always! Thanks for the welcome!

>10 figsfromthistle: Thank you! I do love my front yard.

>11 BLBera: Thank you! Hope all is well.

13streamsong
Edited: Oct 2, 1:21 pm

Happy New Thread, Karen!

Beautiiful front yard!

I really learned a lot (enjoyed may not be quite the right word!) and gave it one of my rare 5 stars. Hope you love it, too!

14drneutron
Oct 2, 8:30 pm

Happy new one, Karen!

15Copperskye
Oct 2, 10:46 pm

Such a beautiful view you have from your porch!!

Happy new thread, Karen!

16vancouverdeb
Oct 3, 4:15 am

Bottle Tree Farm looks lovely ,Karen. Happy New Thread!

17witchyrichy
Oct 3, 10:52 am

>13 streamsong: >14 drneutron: >15 Copperskye: >16 vancouverdeb: Thanks for the good wishes! I am looking forward to "falling into" lots of good books!

18witchyrichy
Edited: Oct 3, 11:01 am



I started reading the Lighthouse Library series by Eva Gates when my family spent summer vacations at the Outer Banks. I bought most of them from Island Bookstore in Corolla and then read them in the winter when I needed a breath of the beach. We haven't gone for several years but I have kept up with them and was happy to see the 10th offering in the series, Death Knells and Wedding Bells. It is the epitome of a cozy mystery series, set in Nags Head, North Carolina, where the real Bodie Lighthouse is now imagined as a library. Lucy Richardson is the main character and a transplant from Boston where she was escaping her impending society marriage. We have followed her progress and this book features her wedding to local boy and Nags Head mayor Connor. There is a cat, of course, and lots of quirky characters who are on full show for the wedding and its aftermath. I figured out the murderer at some point but didn't mind as I was enjoying the sites and sounds and food.

And...my sister rented a place in Duck for November. Can't wait to get back to the OBX.

19johnsimpson
Oct 3, 4:28 pm

Hi Karen my dear, Happy New Thread dear friend.

20witchyrichy
Oct 4, 3:50 pm

>19 johnsimpson: Thank you for stopping by! Hope all is well!

21witchyrichy
Edited: Oct 13, 11:39 am



I am a Phaedra Patrick fan, and Rise and Shine, Benedict Stone did not disappoint. I listened to it as I have for many of hers and the narrator did a good job of capturing various characters. It was a nice surprise to have a male main character. Benedict Stone is middle aged, overweight and coming to realize his dreams of children are not going to come true. His wife is moving away from him, pursuing a new path, and he is at a very low point in his life. That's when his teenaged niece arrives on his doorstep from America. He has never met Gemma as he is estranged from his younger brother and over the course of the novel, we learn Benedict's devastating secret. Benedict is a jeweler just as his parents were and Patrick uses gemstones and their meanings to organize her chapters and form a major element of the plot. I enjoyed learning more about them. A lovely, light but meaningful story.

22EBT1002
Oct 6, 11:02 pm

>18 witchyrichy: Oh, I love the Outer Banks! I might give that cozy mystery series a try.

23witchyrichy
Oct 7, 5:31 pm

>22 EBT1002: There is another series set specifically in Corolla that features a local firefighter named Colleen McCabe. The author is Kathryn O'Sullivan. I enjoyed them as we usually stayed near Corolla.

24witchyrichy
Oct 7, 5:45 pm



Nijay K. Gupta's book is a celebration of women in the scriptures. While she is mainly interested in the early Christian communities, she begins with the Deborah, the celebrated Old Testament judge and also explores the life of Mary. From there, she moves into the history of the early church and tells the story of Phoebe, Prisca, and Junia. I learned about the women and the world in which they lived.

The last section of the book addresses the Biblical scriptures that limit the participation of women in the church. Gupta combines translation and interpretation to make her argument that these scriptures should not rule our lives in the contemporary world.I understand why she needed to include these chapters but also appreciate that she put them at the end. Her arguments are compelling but at the end of the day, we all negotiate with the Biblical text to support our beliefs.

I enjoyed this exploration of the early Biblical women. I received an Early Reviewer copy of the book in return for an honest review.

25FAMeulstee
Oct 8, 4:43 am

Belated happy new thread, Karen!

>1 witchyrichy: What a lovely view.

26witchyrichy
Oct 8, 9:24 am

>25 FAMeulstee: Thanks! October is hurrying along, isn't it?

27witchyrichy
Edited: Oct 8, 1:22 pm



I bought The Cloisters by Katy Hays because of the museum and the use of tarot cards as part of the narrative. I have been learning about and using tarot cards for almost 30 years. I think I missed the fact that it was a psychological thriller. Not my usual fare but I ended up enjoying the book partially because of the setting of the Met's Cloisters in New York. Hays includes the wider city in the setting as well with its nooks and crannies and wealth and poverty sitting side by side. One speech towards the end reminded me a little of the ending of The Devil Wears Prada where Miranda Priestly insists that we always have choices and that Andrea, her assistant, really is just like her. That was the underlying theme of the whole novel: Hays plays with the idea of tarot cards being used for divination and whether characters want to know the future or not. I found myself wondering if Ann, the narrator, was reliable. She tells the truth, including a shocking past, but her actions make you consider whether she was completely trustworthy.

28witchyrichy
Edited: Oct 13, 10:10 am



I finished The 1619 Project and am stunned, for lack of a better word. Nikole Hannah-Jones and her colleagues wove together the stories of Black people past and present through essays, timeline entries, poetry and photographs, showing how racism is part of the fabric that makes America. The language is deliberately provocative; they call plantations forced-labor camps and, indeed, that's what they were. They tie slavery and its accompanying racist narratives to the wealth and health gaps between Whites and Blacks in our country, and they make a good case. I know they came under some criticism but I don't think anyone could quibble with that fundamental truths. They do not apologize for approaching history from a lens of the enslaved and former enslaved. In the end, they call for reparations and make a solid case there as well.

I'm not going to lie: this was not an easy book to read. It's all here from massacres to bombings in more recent memory to the torture, murder and institutionalized rape during the centuries of slavery. I read slowly, partially to absorb it all and partially because it was often overwhelming.

29witchyrichy
Edited: Oct 13, 6:49 pm

Last week, I participated in my second Handmade Book Club challenge. We made a Coptic stitch gratitude journal. I like the book I made although I think some of my interior pockets may be upside down. Oh well, live and learn. This book used wrapping paper for the front and back covers and the signature covers with the pockets.

This is the front cover. Click the picture to see the full album.

30vancouverdeb
Oct 13, 9:32 pm

>29 witchyrichy: What a gorgeous Coptic Stitch journal! I’m looking for something spooky for October. Perhaps The Cloisters would be for me .

31EBT1002
Oct 14, 7:56 pm

>28 witchyrichy: Thanks for that review. I have this on the shelf and I really want to read it.

32witchyrichy
Edited: Oct 17, 10:57 am

Happy Belated Thingaversary to me! My 18th anniversary was October 13. I *thought* it was today. I have yet to indulge in my 19 books but I am making a trip to Pennsylvania this week and can usually find at least something to buy at their community thrift shop.

33weird_O
Edited: Oct 17, 1:10 pm

>27 witchyrichy: As a Berks County native, any reference to the Cloisters brings to my mind the Ephrata Cloisters. Not the same. I also note that a lady in Hanover, PA, who was giving tarot card readings, was visited by police. An old law, still on the books, outlaws such mischief. Good grief.

>28 witchyrichy: Yours is the first review that makes me want to add The 1619 Project to The WANT!! List™. I shall do it.

>29 witchyrichy: Lovely. "The Handmade Book Club challenge"? Is this an LT thing?

34witchyrichy
Oct 17, 2:18 pm

>33 weird_O: I am a Lancaster County native and know about those Cloisters, still drive past them every so often on my visits to family and friends.

As for the tarot: wow! Who knew?! The Today Show has started featuring astrologers and tarot seems to be everywhere.

Be prepared to 1619: it is a must read but it can be brutal.

The Handmade Book Club is sponsored by Ali Manning, the founder of Vintage Page Designs. It is not associated with LT but another virtual group to which I belong. Much more recent than LT but I have done a few of her open challenges.

35witchyrichy
Oct 17, 2:19 pm



Our Lady of Perpetual Hunger by Lisa Donovan is a slim volume I bought because of the focus on food and cooking. But Lisa Donovan explores so much more from her troubled personal life to the challenge of being a woman in the restaurant business. It is a powerful tale with a few jarring scenes including rape and animal harvesting. She doesn't pull any punches. But, she also brings a joy and hope to her story: she knows she can take what life hands out and has fought hard to be able to call herself, in the acknowledgements, the luckiest woman on earth.