Some books on my TBR List - Give Your Child The World by Jaime C. Martin, The Lifegiving Parent by Clay and Sally Clarkson (literally on the nightstand now but need to start it before the library wants it back, whoops), The Religious Potential of the Child by Sofia Cavalletti (got it from inter-library loan on your recommendation but didn't finish it before it had to go back) and because Brian Doyle mentioned her in an essay and I've never heard of her, Maeve Binchy's Nights of Rain and Stars.
I have way too many books on my TBR list to share here! But, I'll mention a riveting non-fiction I read recently: The Burning, by Tim Madigan. It's a creative nonfiction book that dives into the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921 and it's extremely well-written and informative (the author draws from a lot of research and some personal interviews and the book reads like a novel). It's incredibly horrifying, but so important to learn about this tragedy and its legacy.
Thanks for this Laura! I highly recommend Late Migrations by Margaret Renkl (I may have recommended this in a comment before? But sending again in case I hadn’t because it is so good and also fits in your areas of interest)
Some books on my TBR List - Give Your Child The World by Jaime C. Martin, The Lifegiving Parent by Clay and Sally Clarkson (literally on the nightstand now but need to start it before the library wants it back, whoops), The Religious Potential of the Child by Sofia Cavalletti (got it from inter-library loan on your recommendation but didn't finish it before it had to go back) and because Brian Doyle mentioned her in an essay and I've never heard of her, Maeve Binchy's Nights of Rain and Stars.
Amy, you have the best book recs. Can we start a book club? I'm actually serious.
Putting these on my TBR list - thank you! Also I would read the IRS tax code if Brian Doyle recommended it, so I have to dig into this last one.
I have way too many books on my TBR list to share here! But, I'll mention a riveting non-fiction I read recently: The Burning, by Tim Madigan. It's a creative nonfiction book that dives into the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921 and it's extremely well-written and informative (the author draws from a lot of research and some personal interviews and the book reads like a novel). It's incredibly horrifying, but so important to learn about this tragedy and its legacy.
Wow, this sounds like an incredible read - definitely adding it to my list. Thanks so much!
Thanks for this Laura! I highly recommend Late Migrations by Margaret Renkl (I may have recommended this in a comment before? But sending again in case I hadn’t because it is so good and also fits in your areas of interest)
Mary Ann, this sounds right up my alley - wow. Galloping to the library for this one. Thank you so much!