Friendship and Feminism: The Book Club for Troublesome Women

The fact that history repeats itself is never more obvious than when reading historical fiction. This book, The Book Club for Troublesome Women depicts the wives of 1960s middle class families and the societal pressure to keep women at home. This was a time period when women were discouraged from pursuing careers or stimulation outside of their families. Fifty years later, these regressive ideas are gaining momentum once again in the form of misguided restrictive laws based on false memory about how good this was for women.

The Emotional Depth of Historical Fiction in Ann Hood’s The Stolen Child

The Stolen Child is a beautiful story of regret, forgiveness, and the pursuit of dreams.

Kate Quinn’s The Briar Club: A Novel of Women’s Lives during the Red Scare

This novel is set in a time not yet popularized in historical novels. Kate Quinn, best known for her World War II novels, The Alice Network, The Rose Code and The Huntress, ventures into the McCarthy years in this intriguing novel. It is the time of the Red Scare, when people are losing jobs, fear for their safety, and face loss of reputation for their ideas and associations.

A Tale of Immigrant Resilience

Newly released this week, this novel is a throwback to the kind of novel that made me an avid reader. It’s a Barbara Taylor Bradford Woman of Substance kind of book. The undaunted heroine rises from meager circumstances. With talent, grit, and ambition, she faces many obstacles but becomes successful and climbs the rungs of society. This is not a criticism. It is a reflection of the circumstances in the early twentieth century and Maisie McIntyre is such a character.

The Long Reach into the Past

The narrative explores the haunting legacy of the Holocaust through Anne Berest's discovery of an ancestral postcard, initiating her search for family history. The text reflects on personal trauma, societal complicity in atrocities, and contemporary parallels of inhumanity, urging remembrance to prevent repeating the past while confronting present-day prejudices.

Good Dirt by Charmaine Wilkerson: A Story of Resilience

This novel by Charmaine Wilkerson explores themes of loss, grief, and family trauma within a well-educated Black family in Connecticut. It follows Ebby, a survivor of her brother's murder, as she grapples with her past while reclaiming a family heirloom. The narrative, told through multiple perspectives, adds depth and emotional resonance.

Everything We Never Had, A Story of Fathers and Sons

This beautifully crafted novel was written for a young adult audience but I would recommend it for teens and adults alike.Long listed for the National Book Award it is the tale of four generations of Filipino Americans grappling with identity, past trauma and the long reach it has into the future.

Slipping into the Past

This book is not an easy read. If I had read it a couple of years ago, I would have been reminded of how far we've come from the days of back alley abortions, substandard reproductive health care and forced adoptions. Although abortion laws in Canada are still in place, we have taken a giant leap backward with the Dobbs decision overturning Roe. It changes what should have been a historical perspective into a frightening look at where we are heading. I would say this book may now be categorized as historical fiction but if we stay on the current trajectory, it will read as a contemporary novel.

There Are Rivers in the Sky: A Single Drop of Water Connects Then and Now

It’s hard to know where to begin talking about this book. Its breath is massive. It is the story of three characters, two rivers, the Tigris and Thames, and an ancient poem. And beneath it all, it connects us all through a single drop of water. Where else can you find a story that begins … Continue reading There Are Rivers in the Sky: A Single Drop of Water Connects Then and Now

Our Haunted Past Comes Full Circle

The main protagonist, Jane Flanagan, had a troubled childhood dominated by a single alcoholic mother, and a sister she doesn’t connect to. But she has seemingly risen above it to become an archivist at the Schlesinger Library at Harvard. Residual behaviors, unacknowledged yet ever present, rear their ugly heads at a time when all should have been well. She engages in behavior that may cost her both her ascending career and marriage.