Showing posts with label general fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label general fiction. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 19, 2022

All the Lonely People

 

by Mike Gayle (read by Ben Onwukwe)
Library Loan

 

 

Publisher's Summary

In weekly phone calls to his daughter in Australia, widower Hubert Bird paints a picture of the perfect retirement, packed with fun, friendship, and fulfillment. But it's a lie. In reality, Hubert's days are all the same, dragging on without him seeing a single soul.

Until he receives some good news - good news that in one way turns out to be the worst news ever, news that will force him out again, into a world he has long since turned his back on. The news that his daughter is coming for a visit.

Now Hubert faces a seemingly impossible task: to make his real life resemble his fake life before the truth comes out. Along the way Hubert stumbles across a second chance at love, renews a cherished friendship, and finds himself roped into an audacious community scheme that seeks to end loneliness once and for all....

Life is certainly beginning to happen to Hubert Bird. But with the origin of his earlier isolation always lurking in the shadows, will he ever get to live the life he's pretended to have for so long?

©2021 Mike Gayle (P)2021 Grand Central Publishing

 

Look out! It's a two-boxer!

In my family, any book or movie can be rated by how many boxes of tissues you go through while reading or watching. We are an 'easily moved to tears' family-- at least when it comes to fiction; real-life is another matter -- so two-boxer is actually a warning that this one will really make you cry. Regardless of how many boxes of tissues I just went through, I really enjoyed this book; it touched me. It is, at its core, a  story of love, marriage and family, of joy and of sorrow, all beautifully told, without being an overly-saccharine, overly-sentimental mess. It is also a story about aging and loneliness. In other words, its another one of those 'old fart' books that seems to be making their way on to my bookshelves on a regular basis lately. Maybe someone is trying to tell me something.

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Where There's a Will...

 


by Mary Roberts Rinehart (read by Paula Faye Leinweber) c. 1912
Library Loan
 
 
 Where There’s a Will Audiobook By Mary Roberts Rinehart cover art
 

Length: 7 hrs and 4 mins
Unabridged Audiobook
Release date: 07-16-19
Language: English
Publisher: Spoken Realms

Publisher's Summary

Where There’s a Will is Mary Roberts  Rinehart’s hilarious comedy involving a health spa, an heir, a would-be  princess, and an impostor. The story is told by Minnie, who has  essentially run the spa for years and inherited the care of its famous  spring from her father. When the old doctor dies and leaves the Hope  Springs Spa to his near-do-well grandson with the stipulation that he  live on premises for two months in order to inherit, the grandson is  nowhere to be found. So Minnie tries to save the spa by enlisting the  help of family and friends to trick the lawyer and keep the spa running.


Hope Springs Eternal!

Still fresh over a hundred years later! Loved it! What a hoot!  Pure farce. Post and Kellogg, eat your hearts out. The sanitarium business skewered and debunked. Adorable, light-hearted romp in the back-woods of middle America of the early 20th century. The reader has the perfect voice for the story and I love the slang in this one. One of these days I will really have to start writing down all the little turns of phrase that I always thought were new in my youth that are in truth much older than that.

Three and a half stars