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review 2020-05-01 15:40
Mary Wakefield ★★★☆☆
Mary Wakefield - Mazo de la Roche

I don't think I've ever read a romance where I found both romantic leads so thoroughly boring. I had no interest in seeing whether they would work it out, was even sort of rooting for the devious and catty rival Muriel to knock Mary aside and snatch the indolent Philip away. And most likely make him miserable for the rest of his life. The charm of this book was in the peripheral characters and in the strong sense of place. Perhaps my favorite character was Phillip's half-grown spaniel pup, with his melodramatic moanings and joyful gambolings and callow slinkings and mournful mopings. 

 

Hardcover, third in a series, in which I have no desire to read further. I inherited this vintage 1949 book from my father, as one of the few mementos of his mother. I never met her, but from his accounts she was a loving and terrifyingly Sicilian lady who, with her cabal of equally terrifying sisters, kept all the rascally extended family in line. 

 

The book itself has some interesting features. I love vintage books. The yellowed and unevenly cut pages. The wonderful smell of musty old libraries. But this one also has the hardcover embossed with a leafy logo, the original price sticker from what used to be a fancy Austin downtown department store, and a delightful rant about teachers and public schools on the back cover. Also, I used one of my favorite old bookmarks, a fundraiser for The Wilderness Society, with a photo of a solitary live oak in a field of bluebonnets and Indian blankets. It is so very Central Texas that it always makes my heart ache a little. 

 

 

 

 

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text 2020-04-30 13:56
Mary Wakefield - 133/337 pg
Mary Wakefield - Mazo de la Roche

Really Mrs. Lacey had cause for concern. There was her elderly husband dancing like a sailor on the lower deck, with a young woman only partially clothed, and there was one daughter out in the darkness with dear knows whom, and the other daughter brazenly flirting with a divorced man. 

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text 2020-04-29 20:14
Mary Wakefield - 83/337 pg
Mary Wakefield - Mazo de la Roche

I'm not sure how it's possible for me to think both protagonists are too vapidly passive to be at all interesting, or even for me to wish well, but still enjoy reading the story. 

 

 

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text 2020-04-28 03:07
Mary Wakefield - 0%
Mary Wakefield - Mazo de la Roche

The Book Genie is determined to force me out of my comfort zone. She picked a 1949 Romance (3rd in a series I've never read before, of course) that's been on my shelves for a while. It's one of the books my dad gave me, that had belonged to his mother. This one has some interesting physical features, but I'll post those later. I'm anxious to get back to my reading chair and glass of wine!

 

Ha ha I've been trying to come up with an icon for my Book Genie*, and I had been envisioning him as a dark, mysterious, serious genie in a lamp, but I came across my silly old friend Jeannie and decided she was perfect. 

 

*actually a random number generator

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review 2020-03-01 22:41
★★★☆☆ Being Texan: Celebrating a State of Mind
Being Texan: Celebrating a State of Mind - Jeff Carroll

Since my father passed away a couple of years ago, I've been slowly reading through all my books that connect us, as a way of remembering him. He took me with him to pick up this book at an author signing. He became a fan after auditing Carroll's Texas History course at Blinn Jr College. I remember him telling me how, as the only old fart in a class full of teenagers, he probably got much more out of it than the kids that were simply getting their required credits out of the way. Knowing my dad, he probably stayed after every class, BSing with the professor and probably making him late for supper on the regular. My dad did love to tell tales, and he had a passion for local and family history.

 

About the bookThis book is intended to be used as supplemental reading for middle school Texas History classes, and it does it very well, given the constraints. It uses simple language in a direct, storytelling style, meant to both entertain and to reinforce historical facts. The scope is broad enough to satisfy diversity requirements and the prose carefully dances around the kind of scientific and historical facts that tend to annoy the bible thumpers, nationalists, and alt-righters that populate the state textbook selection committee and various schoolboards. I do wish he'd cited his sources for historical fact, or at least provided a reference list at the back, in addition to the facilitator's guide. 

 

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