This has been a week for the record books. Lots of activity at school with auditions and mid-term exams….resuming rehearsals for the children’s opera….a wild wind storm that nearly blew us away….and preparations for Spring Break travel. In all of that, I got to finish an audiobook this week and finally finished the last of my February reads once my feet were on the ground in Arkansas. Just a few more weeks of the really busy season of the semester. At this point, I’m just trying to stay in the routine of reading something each day and keeping some forward progress.
What I Finished This Week


The Au Pair Affair by Tessa Bailey. I absolutely loved this rom-com! It was a fun read that also pulled at the heart strings. Burgess is a single father and a professional hockey player. He needs some help with his precocious 12-year-old daughter. That’s where Tallulah comes in. A graduate student, she is always looking for an inexpensive living arrangement and extra income; the job as Lissa’s au pair — a glorified nanny —- fits the bill perfectly. Complications arise as Tallulah and Burgess develop romantic feelings for each other….and Lissa finds out! Bailey does a tremendous job of exploring the dynamics of non-traditional families while also exploring topics such as May-December relationships and forced retirement. While this was a bit more graphic than the previous Tessa Bailey novel I read, I still found myself really enjoying the writing and fell in love with these characters. 4 stars.
Waiting for the Moon by Kristin Hannah. I think Kristin Hannah is one of the rising stars of contemporary fiction today. With recent favorite reads such as The Women, True Colors, and The Great Alone, I was pleased to find an early novel that would fit one of my reading challenge prompts. I used this for prompt #10: author’s last name is also a first name (but you could also use it because it has a moon on the cover – prompt #12). As I’ve already mentioned, this book was a little different from Hannah’s other books that I have read. The story opens with a young woman being brought to an asylum after a tremendous injury to her head. Ian, a retired doctor, cares for the residents of the coastal Maine facility and reluctantly takes in the injured woman. Since she is unable to recall her name, Ian begins to call her Selena. Over the course of her recovery, Selena discovers that the asylum’s residents are not all insane; instead, many of them suffer from past trauma that they have not learned to deal with. Not surprisingly, Ian and Selena fall in love. Everything seems to be perfect until Elliot arrives, claiming to be Selena’s husband. Out of honor and loyalty, Selena returns to her former life with Elliot although she has no memory of it. What we find there is shocking! When Elliot is injured, Selena decides to bring her husband back to Ian, the only man who can possibly save his life. This is a beautiful story that has many similarities to the Frankenstein narrative while exploring definitions of marriage, family, the God-complex, and selfless love. As much as I enjoyed the story, I felt that the novel suffered because it was one of Hannah’s first attempts as a novelist; her immaturity shows. 3 stars.
What I’m Currently Reading

Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery (p. 144 of 373). I find it very hard to believe that I have never read this classic children’s book. So far, I am finding Anne’s imagination intoxicating and I have fallen in love with this character’s wit, verve, and boldness. Originally, I had planned to read this for prompt # 6- set in Spring, but I really think that I’m going to use it for prompt #2 – a character with red hair.
What’s Ahead in March?


Now that we are halfway through March, I wanted to take a moment to remind us all of what I still need to read this month to get back on track with my reading plan since April’s schedule is also quite full. Two books remain for the month.
- Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister by Gregory Maguire. This book is currently sitting on the table in Arkansas. I should finish Green Gables in the next day or so and will dive right into this novel. The writing doesn’t look dense on the page, so I’m hoping that I can move through it fairly quickly while on Spring Break.
- The Last Bookshop in London by Madeline Martin. I hope to start this one shortly after returning to Plainview next week to finish out the month strong.
I’ll be back next Monday to let you know how things turned out!
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