Tuesday, March 25, 2025

The Midnight Feast by Lucy Foley

 The Midnight Feast by Lucy Foley


I really like Lucy Foley's books.

And I really like the format of her books - especially in audio!

This one, like The Guest List, is told from multiple perspectives and performed by multiple actors/readers/narrators (what do they want to be called, anyway???). So much fun!  I think it would be hard to keep up with who is "talking" without the different voices, so this is definitely one to listen to.

And again, the location is as much a character as the characters. Twisty and turny and a web woven for sure! A secret tragedy one summer between local kids and the rich people on the hill comes crashing back when events are set in motion to bring them all back together again for one fateful weekend by the sea. Definitely not an original outline, but certainly an original presentation.  And the BIRDS.....  wow!!

Monday, March 3, 2025

The Frozen River by Ariel Lawhon

 


I don't know how this is possible, but this was my first Ariel Lawhon book!! 

It will not be the last.  I enjoyed this story SO much more than I even thought I would.  Lawhon's writing takes you RIGHT THERE - to 1780's Maine, no less.  This is fascinating historical fiction INSPIRED BY a real woman - Martha Ballard - who served as a healer and midwife in her small riverside community.  Her journals gave the author the start she needed, and was arguably a character of its own in this story.  A death, several accusations, a fantastically warped and evil bad guy, side plots of her nine children, her past, abuse inflicted upon women, birthing rooms, and her status in the community both as a respected midwife and a woman who cannot give testimony without her husband present all combine into a can't put it down kind of story.  There are a few flashbacks, but not so many as to be jarring.  You really get a feel for the hardships of farm life, of small towns, of suspicions and finger pointing and judgement that was so prevalent in those times.  

In the author's notes, which I ALWAYS read, Lawhon tells how she found this story, condensed the timeline, changed a few other details, but tried to stay within historical accuracy as much as possible. (Never read the author's notes first, y'all, spoilers abound!!) Still, this is fiction.   And I would never have learned about Mrs. Ballard without this book.  I loved that she is a 50 year old woman with life experience.  I loved that her husband was firm, attentive, and totally still in love with his wife.  I loved that Martha had a spark (fictionalized, but may also be true).  I also loved the way the author wrote about the way women were treated and viewed back then - how absolutely horrifyingly the punishments differed for men and for women - fines that would ruin a woman and men who got away with, well, murder.  How women were blamed for unwanted pregnancies - unwanted in the worst way.  Lawhon is relatively delicate about these situations, but doesn't turn her head either.  It happened.  No revisionist history here. And she tells a few facts that she could have turned into another novel about descendants of Martha's - just amazing.

I was actually reminded of my favorite female protagonist - Clare Fraser.  Healer, labeled witch, butts head with men in power.  Yes, I think Martha and Clare would have been fast friends.  If only Clare traveled to Maine...

Some great side stories here about Martha's children - we wait to see Cyrus' story, we learn about Jonathan, we watch as Hannah and Dolly fall in love.  

The ending was pretty perfect too.  

Lawhon's next book is about Grace O'Malley - female Pirate.  I am so in.