Tag Archives: What We’re Reading

What We’re Reading: The Correspondent

Where Nebraska Center for the Book board members share their thoughts about the books they are reading. This month’s review is by Laurie Yocom.

Review of The Correspondent by Virginia Evans.


I just finished the most remarkable book. Generally, I do not love epistolary novels but I adored this book. There is a lost art, it seems, to writing letters in this fast-paced world of ours that is slammed by emails, texts, and snaps. For Sybil Van Antwerp, a 70-something retired lawyer, it is a daily habit, sitting down with her special stationery and writing to all sorts of people, even her neighbor down the street. Throughout the book, you must pay attention to what is happening; I laughed and cried throughout. I especially enjoyed the books she was sharing with all sorts of acquaintances as well as her letters (and their responses!) from several authors as to what she thought of their tomes. The book made me want to pick up my own pen and find those just-right words to send to a multitude of people. I felt a kinship to Sybil that I find I cannot yet put into words, but definitely recommend to readers.

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What We’re Reading: Slow Horses

Where Nebraska Center for the Book board members share their thoughts about the books they are reading. This month’s review is by Richard Miller.

Review of Slow Horses by Mick Herron.


Slow Horses, by Mick Herron is a British fiction spy thriller about MI5 and Slough House, the agency’s dumping ground for agents who have failed in some way in their operations for the agency. The story begins with what appears to be a major blunder on the part of River Cartwright which resulted in damage done by a suicide bomber – millions in destruction, hundreds of train commuters killed, and transportation disrupted. Turns out that the explosion never occurred – it was an exercise. Nevertheless, River is blamed for the failure and is demoted to working with the other “slow horses” at Slough House.

This title is a fast read and packed with characters such as River’s grandfather known as O.B. (Old Bastard) who once was a super spy with MI5; and Jackson Lamb, the flatulent and disgusting head of Slough House. The main plot centers around a Pakistani hostage taken by a right-wing group threatening to cut off his head while online. 

A fast read indeed, gifted to me by my daughter. Apparently there is a TV movie of the book starring Gary Oldman as the disgusting Jackson Lamb. Highly recommended.

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What We’re Reading: Memorial Days

Where Nebraska Center for the Book board members share their thoughts about the books they are reading. This month’s review is by Amy Mather, Partnerships Manager at Omaha Public Library.

Review of Memorial Days by Geraldine Brooks.

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Memorial Days by Geraldine Brooks is a deeply personal memoir chronicling the sudden death of her husband, journalist Tony Horwitz, on Memorial Day 2019.

As a longtime fan of Brooks’s fiction—and of memoirs more broadly—I chose to listen to the audiobook, narrated by the author herself. That choice feels especially meaningful here. Brooks’s narration places you directly at her side as she unpacks the shock of loss, navigates the practical demands of daily life, and struggles to carve out space to properly mourn. Interwoven with her grief are memories of how she and Horwitz met, their years reporting together as foreign correspondents in the Middle East, and her own path toward becoming a novelist.

Reflective, intimate, and heartbreaking, Memorial Days is a powerful meditation on love, loss, and remembrance. Readers who cherish literary memoirs will find this a moving and unforgettable listen.

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What We’re Reading: Wishtree

Where Nebraska Center for the Book board members share their thoughts about the books they are reading. This month’s review is by Laurie Yocum, Wilson Public Library Director.

Review of Wishtree by Katherine Applegate.

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As a public librarian, I try to read outside my normal adult picks so that I can recommend books to youth, young adults, and parents. This weekend I picked up Wishtree by Katherine Applegate.

On my social media, I called it lovely, and it truly is. It is a quick ready, as it is targeted at those who are 9-12. Told from the viewpoint of Red, an oak tree who has seen many-a-thing in his neighborhood, the book is ultimately about immigration, discrimination, friendship, and community, all told in a way that is easily understandable. I also found the ending, on wishing day, satisfying. This would be an excellent read-aloud.

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What We’re Reading: Wolves, Boys, & Other Things That Might Kill Me

Where Nebraska Center for the Book board members share their thoughts about the books they are reading. This month’s review is by Laurie Yocom; Director, Wilson Public Library, Cozad.

Review of Wolves, Boys, & Other Things That Might Kill Me by Kristen Chandler.


I’m getting ready to plan a vacation to Yellowstone this fall, so I picked up a 2010 young adult novel, Wolves, Boys & Other Things That Might Kill Me by Kristen Chandler, to get me in the mood. It also happened to fill a niche in our library’s summer reading challenge as far as being set in a national park.

The main character is K.J., who at 16 has a few things on her plate. Her dad, a reformed lawyer, has been a hunting and fishing guide for as long as K.J. can remember, but doesn’t know how to relate to his daughter. What she can’t remember is her mother, who died in a car accident when she was a toddler. K.J. struggles with dyslexia and expectations about school from her father. The resident klutz of her class, She has “bloomed” over the summer, now getting notice from all the townspeople—and not necessarily about her new look.

Thanks to her journalism class, K.J.’s interest in wolves intensifies when she partners with the new boy in town, Virgil. His mother has come to Montana to study the wolves. With Virgil’s photographs and K.J.’s research, it is not long before things escalate between those who want the wolves in the park and those who want them dead. And maybe someone wants K.J. dead, too.

Chosen as her high school newspaper’s editor, K.J. comes of age, falls in love, and learns about standing up for yourself and your ideas. The themes of bravery and not backing down is told throughout the story in terms of the main character as well as the wolves. Jokes, articles, quotes, and poetry sprinkled between chapters keep the serious narrative somewhat light.

By reading this, I got a sense of the Montana wildlife I hope to encounter this fall, especially an appreciation for wolves that I may not have had before. If you’re looking for a nonfiction selection about wolves, check out The Wolf Almanac: A Celebration of Wolves and Their World by Robert H. Busch.

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