Friday Fiver

Jul. 10th, 2025 09:41 pm
ringsandcoffee: (Default)
[personal profile] ringsandcoffee
1. What was the most sick that you've ever been?
I had meningitis when I was 3 months old.

2. What disease are you afraid of getting?
Cancer, after watching from afar how chemo affected my mom.

3. Are you a big baby when it comes to taking medicine/shots for your illnesses?
No. I had trouble swallowing pills until around age 10, but I would still take my medicine when needed.

4. Is going to the doctor really THAT bad?
Only when I don't feel heard or listened to.

5. Would you have the flu twice a month if you were paid $1,000 for having it?
Nope. That would probably only cover time I missed work due to being sick. Also, having the flu sucks.

[personal profile] reviewsbyerin
The Atlas of Untold Stories


Chloe Vance is sitting on the most exciting news of her life. She's accepted a job teaching art at a school in Prague. Now if only she can find a way to break the news to her always-do-what's-expected mother.

In order to prove that she can take care of herself, Chloe spontaneously invites her mother on a roadtrip touring the literary sites in America's heartland. Her older sister Lauren tags along too. As they visit sites in Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri, and Oklahoma, they experience the wonders of the written word but face the fact that it's our own stories we might have the most trouble sharing.

The characters in this book are all very unique. Chloe has a wonderful free spirit, full of grace. Edie is shackled by invisible tethers of expectations from generations before her. Lauren holds deep secrets and has lost a grasp of her own self-worth. Can the ties of family love triumph in the face of all they are not saying?

This was a great story, especially if you are a literary fan and have visited some of these same sites. It's a study in how we view ourselves, how we view others, and how we can shut others out or let them in. At times it was a difficult book to read, because what we say or what we don't say has the power to hurt others, and unfortunately there are hard moments of pain in the story. But that's not the end. I won't spoil the ending, but I will say it brought happy, touched tears to my eyes.

Recommended for all fans of women's fiction.

I received my copy of the book from the author. All thoughts in this review are my own.

Listen to my interview with Sara Brunsvold:

[personal profile] reviewsbyerin
The Lawyer the Laundress


Sara O’Connor never dreamed her choices would lead her here. Desperate for work, she becomes the laundress at a nearby inn, where she befriends the children who work there or are tutored there.

James Kinney is a principled lawyer raising a daughter on his own. When Evie catches a life-threatening illness, he must rely on the laundress from the inn to tend to Evie after the doctor has given him no hope.

Set in Toronto in 1837, this historical romance is about a woman with a mysterious past and a man with a hurting heart who discover they might find a safe place to flourish and heal in their relationship with the other.

I found the writing to be fresh and engaging, and I easily lost myself in the storyline. My one small complaint is that this leans heavily into the romance with only a small side of real-life history. My personal preference is to have that more balanced. But aside from that, I enjoyed this story and can’t wait to see what Christine Hill Suntz publishes next.

I received my copy of the book from the author. All thoughts in this story are my own.


Listen to my interview with Christine Hill Suntz:



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