Comments Box SVG iconsUsed for the like, share, comment, and reaction icons

Facebook Posts

June reading report!

As I'm writing out these descriptions, I'm realizing that it was kind of a disappointing month of reading. Hoping for better things in July.

Jennifer Weiner, The Griffin Sisters' Greatest Hits. This was an impulse airport buy. It was perfectly fine, especially for travelling. Diverting. Weiner is really, really hung up on body image. I mean, all writers are hung up on something, but this preoccupation does seem to get in the way of her character development. Also, I'm over the plotting device of constantly hinting that SOMETHING BAD HAPPENED IN THE PAST and then not telling us what that bad thing was until three quarters of the way through the book. Have some faith in the reader. If we like your characters, we'll stick in there. You don't have to dangle a carrot in front of us.

Katie Gaddini, Esther's Army. An editor friend sent me this galley copy. I wish I'd liked this book more. There are lots of vignettes about conservative women and what they hope to bring to pass, without much systematic theological or cultural analysis of WHY that actually is.

David Merman Scott and Reiko Scott, Fanocracy. I can't remember why I picked this one up, but I do try to read business books as I'm able. This one was a waste of time, though. Lots of anecdotes with entirely obvious applications. ("Give your customers something for free." Like I'd never thought of that before.) The entire book could have been a single blog post.

Marie Bostwick, The Book Club for Troublesome Women. Bought it at an independent bookstore in Staunton to support the store. Started it three times and finally got far enough in to become engaged. Some interesting stuff here, but too many of the situations read as conscious illustrations of situations from feminist literature, which I found a bit stilted and artificial.

Dorothy Sayers, Murder Must Advertise. This is a reread. I found it while sorting out yet another box from my parents' storage. (I will be doing this until I die.) I hadn't read it since my teens. It's absolutely delightful. Entertaining, sharp, excellent dialogue, characters that stick in your mind. And tight mystery plotting.

Natalie Keller Reinert, The Jump and Flying Dismount, on Kindle. Total airplane-read horse-girl fluff on my iPad. I loved them. Like I love peanut butter chocolates and Ruffles potato chips.
... See MoreSee Less

5 days ago

June reading report!

As Im writing out these descriptions, Im realizing that it was kind of a disappointing month of reading. Hoping for better things in July.

Jennifer Weiner, The Griffin Sisters Greatest Hits. This was an impulse airport buy. It was perfectly fine, especially for travelling. Diverting. Weiner is really, really hung up on body image. I mean, all writers are hung up on something, but this preoccupation does seem to get in the way of her character development. Also, Im over the plotting device of constantly hinting that SOMETHING BAD HAPPENED IN THE PAST and then not telling us what that bad thing was until three quarters of the way through the book. Have some faith in the reader. If we like your characters, well stick in there. You dont have to dangle a carrot in front of us.

Katie Gaddini, Esthers Army. An editor friend sent me this galley copy. I wish Id liked this book more. There are lots of vignettes about conservative women and what they hope to bring to pass, without much systematic theological or cultural analysis of WHY that actually is. 

David Merman Scott and Reiko Scott, Fanocracy. I cant remember why I picked this one up, but I do try to read business books as Im able. This one was a waste of time, though. Lots of anecdotes with entirely obvious applications. (Give your customers something for free. Like Id never thought of that before.) The entire book could have been a single blog post.

Marie Bostwick, The Book Club for Troublesome Women. Bought it at an independent bookstore in Staunton to support the store. Started it three times and finally got far enough in to become engaged. Some interesting stuff here, but too many of the situations read as conscious illustrations of situations from feminist literature, which I found a bit stilted and artificial.

Dorothy Sayers, Murder Must Advertise. This is a reread. I found it while sorting out yet another box from my parents storage. (I will be doing this until I die.) I hadnt read it since my teens. Its absolutely delightful. Entertaining, sharp, excellent dialogue, characters that stick in your mind. And tight mystery plotting.

Natalie Keller Reinert, The Jump and Flying Dismount, on Kindle. Total airplane-read horse-girl fluff on my iPad. I loved them. Like I love peanut butter chocolates and Ruffles potato chips.

Comment on Facebook

"for better things in July," read The Correspondent by Virginia Evans if you haven't yet. 🙂 Also, I am in the middle of Theo of Golden and thoroughly enjoying it...

I reread all the Lord Peter novels from time to time, and my last was Murder Must Advertise. It stood out to me for her grasp of character (or lampooning of types, perhaps).

Three cheers for MMA (and Sayers generally). "Entire book could have been a blog post" (or Substack entry) is a bitingly accurate description for many business books published today.

I had the same reaction to Bookclub for Troublesome Women. I liked the concept, but the execution was a bit clunky.

Would the horse girl series of books be appropriate for a middle schooler who is horse obsessed?

Dorothy Sayers is 👌🏻 Another older author I've been enjoying is Georgette Hayer

I think Murder Must Advertise is one of the absolute best of the Lord Peter mysteries.

I have listened to most of Reinert’s horse books. I like that the pretty good stories aren’t ruined by getting the horse stuff egregiously wrong. I think in her first book in her longest series, (first I read/heard) she does have the main character go straight from dressage to jumping during a tryout of some kind—without changing saddles or shortening stirrups. The real-time scene doesn’t allow for passage of time or implication she did that “off stage.” Nope, they just directed her to the jumps. She would not have done that nor would she have been asked to do so. I braced myself for more horse mistakes in this book or the following ones in the series but was pleasantly surprised. Then I got to wondering if an editor got inserted into the process who wanted to speed the pace up —but I think she self-published at first so … I don’t know. I found the horse situations of the books really authentic—the working student situations, the shows, the money involved, the horse injuries and illnesses. These are definitely light reading, but I really appreciate her work and identify with the stories. The author has been interviewed on the Plaidcast, which is how I learned about her work. Now I need to go back and listen to that episode again to revisit her process. Tickled me to find this on your reading report.

I’m disappointed to hear that about Esther’s Army. I just heard about it last week and was really interested in the concept. Good reminder to read more Sayers though!

I enjoyed The Book Club for Troublesome Women!

Sounds like we could form a Dorothy Sayers book club here 😄 Lately I've been listening to my fiction reading in the car while I travel. Does anyone have a recommendation for good audio recordings of her books?

I'm not a big business book reader, but I still sometimes talk in paragraphs about "The 4 Disciplines of Execution." Its idea of scoreboards inspired the stickers-on-calendar method that helped me track prayer walks while writing my book "Solo Planet" (prayer and writing progress proved so strongly correlated that in some of the rougher weeks I started to prioritize prayer, which always predicted eventual writing progress). As to mysteries, have you ever read Elizabeth Peters' Amelia Peabody Emerson books? I'm on at least my third or fourth pass through the series (now mostly via audiobooks). They're different from Sayers, but I love her character depictions and treatment of marriage, and they seem to offer more laughs than most other mystery series. Anna Lee Huber's books are also very good and I've recently returned to the Laurie King series of Sherlock Holmes/Mary Russell mysteries (which I might have to reread from the beginning).

Sayers is an author I find myself recommending again and again. ❤️

I enjoy Jennifer Weiner, but the Griffin Sisters fell short for me.

Here to agree that MMA is a favorite. That cover is perfect 💁🏻‍♀️

I love Dorothy Sayers.

Love Dorothy Sayers

Hello! Your book stood out during our recent reviews, and we'd love to feature it in Storyline Circle Book Club's July VIP Book Spotlight. Send us a DM to confirm your spot, or contact us through the email listed on our Facebook page. We look forward to hearing from you! Susan Wise Bauer

View more comments

Load more
Contact Us

We're not around right now. But you can send us an email and we'll get back to you, asap.

Not readable? Change text. captcha txt