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From a reader who emailed me:

"I am reading FLUFF!!! And listening to all. Here is a partial list of my June/July titles...

The Other Mothers, Katherine Faulker

Go as a River, Shelley Read *this is a really beautiful book; I would highly recommend it!!

The Summer of Songbirds, Kristy Woodson Harvey

Housekeeping, Marilynne Robinson

The Upstairs Delicatessen, Dwight Garner *this could appeal to your love of food and books; I did find it hard to get into and then the literary allusions were rife (I started jotting notes until I realized there would be multiple references/recommendations in each sentence!!!)

The Maid and The Mystery Guest, Nita Prose

Bad Summer People, Emma Rosenblum

Meet Me at the Lake and Every Summer After, Carly Fortune

The Love of My Life, Rosie Walsh

I love the conversations you are starting!"

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Adding _The Upstairs Delicatessen_ to my list since that sounds VERY much up my alley. And _Go As a River_. Thanks for these, H. <3

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Ah yes, _Heavy_ one of my top 10! Mmmm, yes, it is a masterpiece. I think I learned of _Raising a Rare Girl_ through you, Allison? That's on a Libby list. I haven't heard of the Taffy essay. I enjoyed _Fleishman_, but not the fan that others are. Maybe too NUYC ;-) I'll look for her NYT essay though. Glad to hear your thoughts, Allison!

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I also didn't like Fleishman as much I expected to. The essay I mentioned is quite a departure, though it deals with some overlap in subject matter. Definitely seek it out.

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Allison, your taste/liking so often aligns with my own so as soon as you mentioned this other essay, I went to find it! Total departure, I agree. And while I don't agree with all Brodesser-Akner's conclusions around trauma, I really appreciate many of the related connections she's making. I'll be sharing in my next post. Thanks for pointing me to it, Allison!

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Our tastes really do align. I'm glad you found the essay as interesting as I did!

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I just finished Raising a Rare Girl by Heather Lanier (she also has a great Substack, The Slow Take). This summer I've also read Heavy by Kiese Laymon, which I've been meaning to read for a long time (it's a masterpiece), and The Sicilian Inheritance, by Jo Piazza, which was the perfect summer read.

And I've been delving into some wonderful essays as well. The essay that made the biggest impression on me was The Kidnapping I Can't Escape by Taffy Brodesse-Akner in the New York Times. It is extraordinary.

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It has definitely been a summer of fiction for me:

The Paris Novel and Delicious by Ruth Reichl escapism through food

Brooklyn and looking forward to starting Long Island by Colm Toibin

The Kamagawa Food Detectives more escapism through food and culture. Looking forward to the release of the next book in this series after translation

Tattoos on the Heart moving and relevant

The Women I found interesting for it's subject but the ending felt like she was just tying up loose ends

The Third Rainbow Girl mixed feelings about this. Interesting to note I was at the beach with a group which included two people that had lived and taught school in Pocahontas County during this time of the trial who had also read the book. They thought she had gotten the culture right but felt it was too wandering and lacked focus. I agreed.

Ordinary Grace movingly written suspense/mystery book by William Kent Krueger.

How to Kill Men and Get Away With It only could have read this sitting on the beach

Still on my list for the summer:

Erasure

Maid

Beneath my Feet

And for just my pleasure Pay Dirt by Sara Paretsky

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Ooh great, diverse list, Debbie! I love all things Ruth Reichl so will definitely check out that mention. And I'll add _The Kamagawa Food Detectives_ to my list. That sounds right up a similar alley. I feel you on The Third Rainbow Girl. The culture aspect was fascinating and totally unfamiliar to me so I learned about the area through her words (I remember talking with you about this part) but I wanted more of a journey for her. It did meander. Thanks for chiming in here! <3

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