Monday, October 3, 2011

~ Mailbox Monday ~

Welcome to Mailbox Monday, a weekly meme created by Marcia from A girl and her books. Below are the titles I received for review, purchased, or otherwise obtained over the course of the past week. Mailbox Monday currently is on tour in the Book Blogging Community. This month’s host is Serena of Savvy Verse and Wit. Warning: Mailbox Monday can lead to envy, toppling TBR piles and humongous wish lists!
Falling Together by Marisa de los Santos (for review)
What if saying hello to an old friend meant saying good-bye to life as you know it?
It’s been six years since Pen Calloway watched her best friends walk out of her life. And through the birth of her daughter, the death of her father, and the vicissitudes of single motherhood, she has never stopped missing them.


Pen, Cat, and Will met on their first day of college and formed what seemed like a magical and lifelong bond, only to see their friendship break apart amid the realities of adulthood. When, after years of silence, Cat—the bewitching, charismatic center of their group—e-mails Pen and Will with an urgent request to meet at their college reunion, they can’t refuse. But instead of a happy reconciliation, what awaits is a collision of past and present that sends Pen and Will, with Pen’s five-year-old daughter and Cat’s hostile husband in tow, on a journey across the world.
With her trademark wit, vivid prose, and gift for creating authentic, captivating characters, Marisa de los Santos returns with an emotionally resonant novel about our deepest human connections. As Pen and Will struggle to uncover the truth about Cat, they find more than they bargained for: startling truths about who they were before and who they are now. They must confront the reasons their friendship fell apart and discover how—and if—it can ever fall back together.
Wishes and Stitches by Rachel Heron (came with Falling Together)
It has always been Naomi Fontaine’s dream to practice small-town medicine—an ambition that brought her to Cypress Hollow, the charming, tight-knit community her late friend, knitting guru Eliza Carpenter, loved so well. But no matter how hard she tries, Naomi can’t seem to fit in here. Then rugged Rig Keller moves in to take over half of Naomi’s medical practice, and instantly charms everyone in town . . . including Naomi.


Rig saw what a broken relationship did to his brother, and has no interest whatsoever in getting serious. But the temptation to play doctor with his new partner is just too strong to resist. Any chance they might have of being truly knit together by love, however, depends entirely on what secrets they are willing to reveal . . . and on Rig’s willingness to risk his heart and Naomi’s desire to open hers completely.
The Pyramid by Henning Mankell (from a friend)
The missing piece of the internationally bestselling Kurt Wallander mystery series: the story of Kurt Wallander's beginnings.
Revealing a side of Wallander that we have never seen, the long stories collected in" The Pyramid" are vintage Mankell. Here, we see Wallander on his homicide first case as a twenty-one-year-old patrolman, as a young father facing unexpected danger on Christmas Eve, as a middle-aged detective with his marriage on the brink, as a newly separated investigator solving the brutal murder of a local photographer, and finally as a veteran detective, with his signature methodical and instinctive work style, discovering unexpected connections between a downed plane and the assassination of a pair of spinster sisters. In these five riveting tales we watch Kurt Wallander come into his own not only as a detective but as a human being
Tinkers by Paul Harding (purchase)
An old man lies dying. As time collapses into memory, he travels deep into his past where he is reunited with his father and relives the wonder and pain of his impoverished New England youth. At once heartbreaking and life affirming, Tinkers is an elegiac meditation on love, loss, and the fierce beauty of nature.
The Hand That First Held Mine by Maggie O'Farrell (purchase)
Maggie O'Farrell has a singular knack for sensing the magnetic fields that push and pull people in love, and in The Hand That First Held Mine, she summons those invisible forces to tell two stories. The first is the spirited journey of Lexie Sinclair, a bright, tempestuous woman who finds her way from rural Devon to the center of postwar London's burgeoning art scene. Her force of personality makes her a natural critic (she's a wonderful tour guide to Soho's Bohemian circles), and she soon falls deeply in love.


Fast forward fifty years and you'll meet Ted and Elina: a contemporary London couple who've just had their first child, both afflicted with a crisis of memory--Elina can recall only bits and pieces of her life before the baby, while Ted fights off memories he can't even recognize. O'Farrell alternates these plots artfully, always keeping the incorrigible Lexie in forward motion, while letting Ted and Elina wade further back in time. Inevitably, the two stories collide, and the result is a remarkably taut and unsentimental whole that embraces the unpredictable, both in love and in life.

20 comments:

  1. I've heard great things about Tinkers....enjoy your books.

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  2. A nice selection of books. Enjoy them all.

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  3. I have always heard that Henning Mankell is who you need to read if you like Scandinavian mystery thrillers. He has written so many of them, I don't know where to start. Look forward to hearing about that one!

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  4. You have some good books to read. Enjoy!

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  5. Falling Together is a popular find in many mailboxes. I can't wait to see what everyone thinks of it.

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  6. I actually just bought a copy of Tinkers the other day, and also want to get my hands on a copy of The Hand That First Held Mine. I have heard great things about that book! Lots of neat stuff you got this week! I am envious of some of your new arrivals!

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  7. de los Santos and Heron books look fantastic. I like Marisa's stories. Enjoy! Have a wonderful week and happy reading!

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  8. A nice variety of reads to enjoy.

    http://tributebooksmama.blogspot.com/2011/10/mailbox-monday.html

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  9. The Maggie O'Farrell book looks especially good!

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  10. All your books sound great. I wouldn't know where to start.

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  11. Yay, you got Marisa de los Santos' latest book too! I gave Wishes & Stitches away to another book blogger in the end. I really want to read The Hand That First Held Mine too. Enjoy your new books!

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  12. I recently bought The Hand That First Held Mine too! I've heard it's wonderful!

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  13. You got some good ones. I've been hearing all about this Mankell but I'm trying Nesbo first.

    And I'm curious to see what you think of Falling Together.

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  14. Nice selection of books Amy. I'm looking forward to Falling Together.

    Enjoy them all.

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  15. I can't wait for your review of Wishes & Stitches! Happy reading!

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  16. I also received Falling Together...Wishes and Stitches looks nice to me also since I've been trying to get some knitting done lately.

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  17. I'm so excited about Falling Together -- can't wait to read it! Marisa de los Santos is an excellent writer. The cover for The Hand That First Held Mine is really captivating... hope it's a great read!

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  18. Tinkers was great, but in a very quiet, subtle way.

    I want to read Falling Together, mostly because I am just so in love with authors who support book bloggers. Love her!

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  19. What a great mailbox! I recently received de los Santos' novel Belong to Me, and everyone says I'll love it, and I've read nothing but good about this latest one as well! As a knitter, how could I NOT want to read Wishes and Stitches? :)
    Every single title you received is one that I would love to read! Enjoy!

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