Every month I try to read at least one book from the following categories: nonfiction, devotional, and fiction. In 2019 I’m not participating in a formal reading challenge, but rather The Unread Shelf Project 2019, a challenge to read books that I already own. So I’ll be listing where each book came from this year instead of listing a particular challenge category. This is my August 2019 Reading List, my brief reviews and book recommendations for August 2019. Hopefully I’ll provide you with some inspiration for your future reading as well!
Books Finished:
Daisy Jones & The Six by Taylor Jenkins Reid
Borrowed from library using Libby app.
I listened to the audiobook, and recommend reading this one that way. The cast of narrators (see the image above for a listing) is top-notch, and really brings the story to life. This is a novel telling the story of a fictional band in the 1970s. It is written like a rock biography, and is so well written that I kept thinking that I wanted to look up the people in the band or find the songs that they were referring to, before remembering it was fiction. The ending of the book tied everything together superbly. I can’t recommend this book highly enough.
It Burns: The Scandal-Plagued Race to Breed the World’s Hottest Chili by Marc Fennell
Audible Original book, so new but free.
An Audible Original, this audiobook was more like a podcast series. The author/narrator is a journalist who talks to several different people about the world’s hottest chili peppers. It was fascinating, and an entertaining way to spend a few hours while driving.
The Air We Breathe by Andrea Barrett
Already owned physical book.
A novel told from the perspective of a man in a tuberculosis sanitorium about some of the other people working and living in the sanitorium in 1916. It doesn’t seem like this setting would make for an interesting story, but it just goes to show that in the right hands any setting can have a compelling story. The characters were relatable while also unique. I really liked this book.
D-Day Girls: The Spies Who Armed the Resistance, Sabotaged the Nazis, and Helped Win World War II by Sarah Rose
Borrowed from library using Libby app.
This nonfiction book includes the true stories of French women living in the UK during World War II, who were trained and sent to France to act as spies and saboteurs. Not surprisingly, not all of the women survived to the war’s end. The women were brave and strong, and were able to do things that are so hard to imagine. I listened to this on audio, and it was well-read.
A Grown-Up Guide to Dinosaurs by Ben Garrod
Audible Original book, so new but free.
Another Audible Original that I enjoyed this month, this one was about dinosaurs. As a child I was really interested in dinosaurs (who wasn’t?), and my favorites were the Plesiosaur and the Brachiosaurus. This book talked about the evolution of dinosaurs, and corrected the misconception that I had that these large dinosaurs were all running the Earth at the same time (spoiler, they were not). It also talked about dinosaurs that are still living today. This was so interesting, and truly educational too.
What You Have Left by Will Allison
Already owned physical book.
This book is the story of a wife/mother dying, and a father dropping his daughter off with the grandfather. The whole thing frustrated me so much. No one seemed to understand or deal with the traumas that everyone experienced over the years. And the daughter’s character just made a sudden left-hand turn into alcoholism and gambling, and wasted the opportunities that her grandfather had given her, which made no sense. I read this book clear to the end, and the ending is somewhat satisfying. But the characters just made me incredibly angry throughout the book.
Eat Cake. Be Brave. by Melissa Radke
Purchased using Audible credit.
Melissa Radke apparently has viral videos, and has been in a reality TV show, but I didn’t know any of that before picking out this book to listen to. Honestly, I don’t know how or where I found out about this book, but I’m glad that I did. Melissa tells her story toward bravery and love (including love of herself), and it is fabulous. She narrates the audiobook, which makes it even more awesome. This is a message that all women probably need to hear.
Living on Purpose: Knowing God’s Design for Your Life by Barry D. Ham
Already owned Kindle e-book.
Dr. Ham covers the various areas of life where and how we can fulfill God’s purpose in our life. Each section is about a different area of life (i.e. marriage, career, parenting, etc.), and each chapter is a subtopic relating to that area. I really liked how the end of each chapter had all of the key points, so that you could put the chapter into perspective with the whole book and the whole idea of finding and fulfilling our purpose.
Scuba Exceptional: Become the Best Diver You Can Be by Simon Pridmore
Already owned Audible book.
Mike had purchased this book on Audible, along with several others by Pridmore. I’d listened to the others, and learned good information to help me be a better and safer scuba diver. Because we already had this one in our collection, I listened to it as well. I learned some really good information, and parts of the book sparked really good conversation with Mike as well as with some of our scuba diving friends. If you’re a diver, I’d consider Pridmore’s books must-reads.
The Magic Strings of Frankie Presto by Mitch Albom
Borrowed from library using Libby app.
This is my book club’s November book, and it was available from Libby as an e-book now. I picked it up and read through the whole thing in about three days. It was wonderful. I don’t really want to say much about the book’s plot, because it was so enjoyable discovering it as I went along. What I can say without ruining anything, is that Frankie Presto is a musician, with an interesting instrument and strings, and this is his story, told from his perspective, as well as the perspective of others. I’m really looking forward to discussing this with my book club, and hearing all of their perspectives.
The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up: The Japanese Art of Decluttering and Organizing by Marie Kondo
Already owned Audible book.
This was my book club’s pick for August. I’d listened to it once before, and listened to it again to refresh my recollection about the details before we discussed it. Marie Kondo has come into some fame recently with the Netflix series about her tidying up methods. I think this was the original book that she wrote and released about it. There are some components of her methods that make a lot of sense (i.e. keeping things that spark joy), but there are a lot of pieces of her methods that I find completely unrealistic or outrageous. For example, all of my spatulas don’t spark joy, but they’re all needed for cooking that we do, so I’m keeping them. Or, Kondo recommends getting rid of books after reading them, because she only sees books as valuable or important for the content inside of them, whereas I find joy from simply having lots of books on my shelves. Also, Kondo thinks that inanimate objects have feelings and emotions, which is just dumb. I do find the book kind of hilarious. So read this if you need some inspiration to help you tidy, but realize that I’m not advocating for all of her techniques.
Maid: Hard Work, Low Pay, and a Mother’s Will to Survive by Stephanie Land
Borrowed from library using Libby app.
On the topic of cleaning, I also listened to Maid this month. This is a memoir of Stephanie Land’s experience living in poverty, working as a maid, and caring for her daughter. She escapes a relationship with domestic violence, and gains independence, only to get herself into another crappy relationship and become totally dependent on another man. Her poor decisions really frustrated me. It appeared to me that her circumstances had much more to do with this sort of co-dependent relationship and emotional issues, rather than with her working as a cleaning lady. Her refusal to utilize all of the services that would be available to her and would have improved her circumstances also frustrated me. An example was when she admitted that she went hungry instead of utilizing food banks. Toward the end of the book, she did utilize grants and student loans to go to college, which I was thankful to hear about. But she could have continued her education immediately after becoming pregnant or having her daughter, and it would have (and later did) provide enough of a cushion for her to complete her education and then obtain a better job. I don’t mean any of this to criticize Stephanie Land, as it’s clear that she’s had a hard life, and her family supports were crappy. But I regularly work with folks in much the same position that she found herself in, and poor decisions and prideful refusal to utilize all of the available services set people back in moving out of poverty. And I don’t want anyone to think that she had to stay in the hard circumstances for as long as she ultimately did.
Dune by Frank Herbert
Borrowed from library using Libby app.
One of my book club friends recommended Dune to me, and it’s been on my TBR list for a while. I finally read it, and really enjoyed it. This book would best be classified as sci-fi, which was a step outside of my typical reading. But it reminded me a lot of The Name of the Wind, with it’s world-building and protagonist. It did take me a little while to get into the vocabulary and language used in the book, but once I figured out the vocabulary I was set for the next 800 or so pages.
Books In Progress:
The Heroin Diaries: A Year in the Life of a Shattered Rock Star by Nikki Sixx (Purchased using Audible credit.)
Courageously Uncomfortable by Lisa J. Goins (Already owned Kindle e-book.) My bible study group is working through this book.
The Selected Letters of Willa Cather by Willa Cather, Andrew Jewell, and Janis Stout (Purchased physical book this year.)
Books Abandoned:
A Prayer for Owen Meany by John Irving (Borrowed from library using Libby app.)