Thursday, March 5, 2026
The Country Girls by Edna O'Brien - Reading Ireland 2026
O’Brien’s first novel is a coming of age story, with autobiographical elements, about Caithleen Brady and her frenemy, Baba Brennan; two girls from rural Ireland who yearn for something not available at home. Cait’s mother dotes on her but does not protect her or prepare her for life, perhaps because she cannot protect herself from a drunken, spendthrift husband. Cait is conscious that she doesn’t have the possessions her friend does: nice clothes, for example, or a bicycle. Baba always wants more, however, and helps herself in a very unattractive way to what she wants – she takes the flowers Cait picked for their teacher so she can present them, she snatches biscuits from the Bradys’ kitchen although she must know how little the family has, and she ends up with Mrs. Brady’s rings. She is a vivid but unlikable character while Cait is dreamy but annoyingly passive.
Tuesday, March 3, 2026
Top Ten Tuesday: Books I Frequently Recommend
Welcome to this week's edition of Top Ten Tuesday which is hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl. This week’s theme is a freebie, up to each participant. I had just been thinking about some of the books I most enjoy recommending so that seemed like my topic.
These are all books of which I snap up extra copies for gift giving and general proselytizing:
Sunday, March 1, 2026
And Both Were Young by Madeleine L'Engle
Set in the late 1940s, Madeleine L’Engle’s first book for young people is a boarding school story about an American teen, still recovering from the loss of her mother, and how a friendship with a serious French boy with demons of his own brings both solace. Philippa Hunter, known as Flip, had hoped to travel with her artist father – he is working on illustrations for a book about lost children throughout Europe and Asia, including those from WWII. Instead, his possessive girlfriend, Mrs. Jackman, has arranged for her to attend a boarding school in Switzerland.
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