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Sunday, February 2, 2025

Stacking the Shelves #45

 


Stacking the Shelves is a weekly meme hosted by Reading Reality. It's a place to showcase any books I have purchased, borrowed, or been lucky enough to have been given an advance copy of. Hope you find something that looks interesting to you or that makes you remember a favorite book you need to finish. Enjoy your reading this week!



Purchase from Hourly History website: Free

Every Friday Hourly History sends me an email with books that are free or very cheap for that day. I have loaded up on these. They are becoming my favorite quick books to read between longer ones. I don't know much about this Scottish ruler so a quick overview will be great and then I can decide if I want to delve further with a longer history or historical fiction book about him. I have a few books by author N. Gemini Sasson that I might dig back into. She has written a series called The Bruce Trilogy about Robert the Bruce that look good. 






Borrowed from Library: Free

I love Matt Lewis's books and podcast. He is so knowledgeable about the middle ages and especially the Wars of the Roses period. I never get bored listening to his show, Gone Medieval, on Apple Podcast. This book takes different instances of rebellion during the period of the Norman Conquest through the Wars of the Roses and adds his usual interesting spin on them. As a history buff I'm excited for this one!







Purchase on Kindle: $0.99 on sale

This author has written a series of books called, "Medieval Babes: Tales of Little Known Ladies." There are twelve in all, they are short, no more than on average, 250 pages but each one is about someone who is either a secondary person in the life of a more famous one or an overlooked queen, such as Eleanor of Provence. I love authors who write about these people because there is so much on the famous historical figures out there. It's nice to learn about someone entirely different sometimes. 





Friday, January 31, 2025

Five Little Pigs by Agatha Christie (A Hercule Poirot Mystery, Book 24) Read Christie January 2025 Selection


Publication Date: 

May 1942

Genre:

Classic Mysteries/Cozy Mysteries

Series:

Hercule Poirot Mysteries 

Length:

234 pages

Book Description (GoodReads):

It was an open and shut case. All the evidence said Caroline Crale poisoned her philandering husband, a brilliant painter. She was quickly and easily convicted and sentenced to life in prison.
Now, sixteen years later, in a posthumous letter, Mrs. Crale has assured her grown daughter that she was innocent. But instead of setting the young woman's mind at ease, the letter only raises disquieting questions. Did Caroline indeed write the truth? And if she didn't kill her husband, who did?

To find out, the Crale’s daughter asks Hercule Poirot to reopen the case. His investigation takes him deep into the conflicting memories and motivations of the five other people who were with the Crales on the fatal day. With his keen understanding of human psychology, he manages to discover the surprising truth behind the artist's death.

My Thoughts:

The title of the book was clever. Poirot labels each suspect as one of the pigs from the nursery rhyme and we see the reasons unfold as each one tells his or her account of what they heard and saw about the murder as well as their thoughts and impressions of the others. 

There are Phillip and Meredith Blake (brothers), Angela (Mrs. Crale's half sister), Angela's governess Cecilia Williams, and model Elsa Greer who is carrying on with the victim prior to his death. Elsa is only a young girl of around twenty who is carefree and unbothered that she is breaking up a marriage. Most of the people involved either love or hate her and some feel she is a manipulator and well aware of what she is doing. Some are unsympathetic to Caroline and feel she deserved what she got....going to prison for killing her husband. 

Caroline's daughter, Carla is not so sure and wants Poirot to find out the truth. He does so in his customary way of interview and reel them in. He spends a lot of time listening to the five people tell their stories and trying to decipher the mental motives behind it all. The truth of course isn't what is seems at first and it will take him patience and time to get to the bottom of things. 

This book was honestly disappointing for me. I found it to be long and tedious. There just wasn't much to the plot. Jealous wife. Daughter determined to clear her mother's name. Saucy young girl with fantasies in her head of the future with a married man who will love her only. It's been done so many times. I absolutely love Poirot, always do. But this story just fell flat and the ending was not that climactic to me. I think as always Christie is a master of human psychology and sets up her characters and their many personal flaws superbly. She really excels with knowing how people operate. I just thought the mystery and crime were pretty substandard and the resolution not all that exciting or jaw dropping. I guess I'm used to a little more "twistiness" in her stories now! 

While I don't recommend skipping this one altogether, it is not one I'd put on my radar if you have a limited time to read Christie books. It felt like she was kind of going through the motions with it. But I got it read and reviewed in January and that was my goal!




Wednesday, January 29, 2025

Can't Wait Wednesday: The Rebel Empresses: Elisabeth of Austria and Eugenie of France: Power and Glamour in the Struggle for Europe by Nancy Goldstone

 



For this week's Can't Wait Wednesday, hosted by Tressa at Wishful Endings, I'm featuring, The Rebel Empresses, by Nancy Goldstone. She has written several award winning non- fiction history books that I have added to my lists over the years. Many involve some lesser known historical figures such as Catherine de' Medici's daughter, Marguerite de Valois and Joanna of Naples. This one looks interesting and the cover is so pretty. I hope you've found something you can't wait to read this week. Happy reading ya'll!

History

February 25, 2025





Book Description courtesy of GoodReads:

When they married Emperors Franz Joseph and Napoleon III, respectively, Elisabeth of Austria and Eugénie of France became two of the most famous women on the planet. Not only were they both young and beautiful—becoming cultural and fashion icons of their time—but they played a pivotal role in ruling their realms during a tempestuous era characterized by unprecedented political and technological change.
 
Fearless, adventurous, and independent, Elisabeth and Eugénie represented a new kind of empress—one who rebelled against tradition and anticipated and embraced modern values. Yet both women endured hardship in their private and public lives. Elisabeth was plagued by a mother-in-law who snatched her infant children away and undermined her authority at court. Eugénie’s husband was an infamous philanderer who could not match the military prowess of his namesake. Between them, Elisabeth and Eugénie were personally involved in every major international confrontation in their turbulent century, which witnessed thrilling technological advances, as well as revolutions, assassinations, and wars.

With her characteristic in-depth research and jump-off-the-page writing, Nancy Goldstone brings to life these two remarkable women, as Europe goes through the convulsions that led up to the international landscape we recognize today.