What does Mother’s Day mean to you? I was incredibly fortunate to have grown up with a mother who truly believed that we celebrated the importance of our relationship all year round. That said, there was always something very special about Mother’s Day; my sisters and I would see to that. It’s been eighteen years of Mother’s Day without my dear mother but as a mother myself, the tradition lives on in the joy I share with my children.
In this witty and honest memoir, Alice Eve Cohen is visited by her mother’s spirit 30 years after her passing. Accompanying Alice through some of her life’s most challenging moments, it takes her mother’s spirit to teach Alice that you don’t have to be perfect to be a good mother.
Featuring essays by Jennifer Weiner, Lea Grover, and Angie Miller, this collection cleverly weaves together countless personal interpretations of what mothering means. From adoption, to first-time motherhood, to never mothering, you will love this thought-provoking, humorous selection!
After her mother drove away without explanation, Melissa Cistaro was left questioning. Thirty-five years later, Melissa finds out that the mother who abandoned her is dying, presenting a personal dilemma: would Melissa try and reconnect with the woman who left her or not?
When poet Leslea Newman found out that her mother was dying, she picked up and was able to spend time caring for her. Inspired by their time together, comes this gorgeous collection of poems that will encourage readers to appreciate their own relationships.
Including essays from Joyce Carol Oates, Elissa Schappell, and Caroline Leavitt, this fabulous collection edited by Elizabeth Benedict explores all of the kinds of gifts our mothers gave us. From the funny and serious to the outrageous and unexpected, each story illuminates how gifts reveal themselves over time.
I have lots of fabulous author experiences coming up, so please check in at Reading With Robin and click on “Events” to join in the fun!
To win a copy of one of the titles mentioned in this article leave a comment below and please include your email address. Happy Mother’s Day!
ROBIN KALL is Rhode Island’s own book maven. From author interviews to events with best-selling authors, Robin shares her love of books wherever and whenever possible. You can connect with Robin on Facebook and follow her on Twitter , or on her website which is updated constantly with all new author interviews and bookish information. Reading With Robin is on AM790 Fridays from 4-5pm and on I Heart Radio (search AM790 WPRV)
Coming up this Friday, May 15th Robin’s guests will be: Erika Robuck author The House Of Hawthorne and Karen White author of The Sound Of Glass.
Well-Read: Reading with Robin- Books I’m looking forward to This Year - Part One.
Judy Blume is the first author I ever fell in love with. Like so many others of a certain age, reading Are You There God, It’s Me Margaret, made me a reader. I read every Judy Blume book that was out there and eagerly awaited whatever was to come next. When I found out that Blume had a new adult book coming out this summer I immediately emailed her publicist and started a campaign to bring her here to Rhode Island. Not sure how that’s going to work out but I know we will set up an interview. I’m just that persistent. In The Unlikely Event is based on the true story of a series of passenger planes that crashed in Elizabeth, New Jersey within a three month period when Blume was a teenager. Not surprisingly, this left a big impression on the author who uses this as a backdrop in telling the story of three generations of family, friends and strangers who will be forever changed by these events. (June 2nd)
I love reading the kind of book whose hero desperately wants to be part of a world that he is just not from. (think Miranda Beverly-Whittemore’s Bittersweet) This is the perfect set-up for all sorts of trouble and undesirable behavior by colorful characters. Meet Wylie Rose who, since childhood, has been drawn to the charming, close-knit Bonet siblings. Growing up, Wylie’s friendship with Aurelio allowed him access to the “love of his life” Cesca who is not the sort of girl to be in a relationship for very long. Cesca toys with Wylie’s affections ultimately ruining the possibility of a relationship with any other woman. Sounds bewitching. (May 12th)
I first met Amanda when I had her as a guest on Reading With Robin to discuss her then new novel, How To Be Lost. I have been a fan ever since from Forgive Me and Close Your Eyes to Love Stories in this Town. Amanda is an Evening With Authors alum and whenever a new book comes out, I want to read it without knowing anything about it. After reading a little bit about The Same Sky I am even more excited to read it , especially when Jodi Picout says “..this one’s going to haunt me for a long time…” The Same Sky is about finding courage through struggle and hope and gathering the strength—no matter what—to find the place where you belong. (0ut now)
From the author of Belong To Me (you’ll all remember the brightly colored rain boots on the cover) comes the highly anticipated novel, The Precious One. Told in alternating voices this is an unforgettable story of family secrets, obsession and filled with heartfelt insights which are present in all of de los Santos’ writing. In her life, Eustacia “Taisy” Cleary has given her heart to only three men: her first love, her twin brother and her father.
Seventeen years ago, Taisy’s father left his first family for Caroline, a beautiful young sculptor. In all that time, Taisy’s family seen Wilson and his family only once. Now Wilson is initing Taisy for an extended visit. Why, all of the sudden does he want Taisy to help him write his memoir? Curious, indeed. (March 24th)
From the beloved author of Water For Elephants, which was the 2008 Reading Across Rhode Island pick, comes Gruen’s latest tale about a privileged young woman’s personal awakening as she experiences the horrors of World War II in a Scottish Highlands village. Madeline Hyde, a young socialite from Philadelphia, reluctantly follows her husband and their best friend to the tiny village of Drumnadrochit in search of the Loch Ness
Monster. What Maddie finds out about herself and the larger world through the most unlikely friendships with the villagers opens her up to the beauty in the world as well as the very dark places all around her. (March 31st)
Brought to us by the author of The Swimming Pool which I read years ago and still remember well (which says a lot). The Half Brother is another book with a favorite premise at its center, school-set novels. What better time of a character’s life to throw all sorts of situations at them than school age? A New England boarding school, no less. LeCraw is a master at drawing memorable characters who have curious ways of navigating through their lives and will have you wanting to know more and more.
(Feb 17th) Holly LeCraw will be in Rhode Island March 5th at 7pm for a book talk& signing at The Willet Free Library.
*Bonus giveaway. I have 10 copies of The Half Brother to give away. You can enter your book club to win or enter individually by emailing me at [email protected]
Books arrive at my home each and every day. Books that are being published in the next few months, the next year and sometimes books that are already on the shelves. It is an embarrassment of riches. I cannot possibly get to all of them so I surprise myself when I pluck one from the pile and sit right down to read it. This was the case when My Sunshine Away arrived. I’m not sure if it was the gorgeous cover that sucked me in as great covers have a tendency to do. Or if it was the little bit I read about the story –set in the summer of 1989 in a lovely Baton Rouge neighborhood where the “belle of the block” type fifteen-year-old girl is the target of a horrific crime and the dark side of suburbia is revealed. (Feb 10th)
From one of my favorite historical fiction writers, The House of Hawthorne, is the much-anticipated novel about a literary couple. (What better subject for a book lover?) It’s the story of the unlikely marriage between Nathaniel Hawthorne, the novelist, and Sophia Peabody, the invalid artist. As in all of her novels, Robuck does a thorough job of her research and brings us a story that is both historically factual and creatively told with well-rounded characters. The House of Hawthorne spans the years from the 1830s to the Civil War and takes us from Massachusetts to England, Portugal, and Italy. The tension within a famous marriage of two strong-willed and deeply artistic people is something I’m very interested to read about. Look for Erika’s book tour this spring, as it will take her to New England. Let’s hope we can snag a stop in Rhode Island! (May 5th)
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