@KarlyK

@KarlyK

Karly

416 ReadsLibrarian

You could say I've been puttering around the Wardrobe my whole life. Mercifully, I finally climbed through. Further up & further in...
Children's, anything on the water, Classics, Mystery, History 📚

Followers2

Following11

Joined 9 months ago

Pennsylvania

Karly's Books by Status

232 Books

See all
The Silkworm
Project Hail Mary
In the House of Tom Bombadil
The Original Home Schooling Series: Volumes 1-6
A Beginner's Guide to Dante's Divine Comedy
Toxic Empathy: How Progressives Exploit Christian Compassion
You Bet Your Stretch Marks

Karly's Reading Goals

Goal

12/40 books
30%

2026 Reading Challenge

Read 40 books by . They're 8 books behind schedule.

Karly's Pinned Prompts

Prompt

75 books

What books did you read in 2026?

List the books you read in 2026 as the year progresses, put reviews here. You can pin this on your profile.

The Sea Captain's Wife
The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession
The Dutch House

Karly's Pinned Lists

Karly's Most Popular Reviews

Best way to read this is to listen to Ina tell her own story. I didn't know much about her life pre-Food Network, but she has quite a life of adventures!

Fatal Puzzle makes up the first in what promises to be an intriguing murder/historical thriller series. I went into the book hoping it to be reminiscent of Dan Brown puzzlers, and it started off that way, but I think the overall depth of the puzzle was a bit lacking. The story is a short read, so maybe for this purpose the murderer's puzzle was not more complex. The characters are very interesting, and the ending sets up what could be a good sequel.

Not Erik Larson's best, but still good! I found the later chapters on Marconi repetitive at times and was tempted to skim over them until the Crippen plot picked up again. His descriptions and development of the main character (Crippen) was fantastic as always - just like he did with Holmes in [b:The Devil in the White City: Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair that Changed America 21996 The Devil in the White City Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair that Changed America Erik Larson https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1312066724s/21996.jpg 3486041].

I initially began reading this book very curious to learn about the family food culture in France. While a memoir of one woman's trials & tribulations adjusting to social life in a new country, there was a lot of repetitive concepts and explanations. Perhaps I grew up in an all-American household much more culinarily diversified and disciplined than the average (never thought so until reading this book), but I was a bit surprised at the closed-mindedness initially had by the author. For someone who seems more world traveled than I and with a cross-cultural family, the author seemed shocked and dramatically thrown off by cultural differences I would have thought a grown woman could have navigated with more finesse. Too often I was given the impression that French relatives, peers, and citizens were viewed as the ‘enemy' or the ‘rival to be beat', yet wasn't the goal to assimilate and embrace their culture?All in all, I wasn't able to finish the book in its entirety. However, I look forward to reading [b:Bringing Up Bébé: One American Mother Discovers the Wisdom of French Parenting 13152287 Bringing Up Bébé One American Mother Discovers the Wisdom of French Parenting Pamela Druckerman http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1327009243s/13152287.jpg 17885255] . Perhaps better luck next time....

The best love story I've read in a loonnnnggg time