

I am an American expat who has lived in southern Thailand for 20 years. I teach English at the Kindergarten level. I read, bullet journal, write a blog, and collect stamps.
609 Books
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5,949 booksWhen you think back on every book you've ever read, what are some of your favorites? These can be from any time of your life – books that resonated with you as a kid, ones that shaped your personal...
James Patterson and Matt Eversmann provide a fascinating glimpse into the work that America's booksellers and librarians do, offering up thumbnail biographies of how each developed their love of reading and how they view modern readers and the impact they have on their lives. I found much of the book extremely inspiring and it gave me numerous ideas of how I can make a difference in developing literacy amongst my (very) young students. One does not have to be a librarian, a bookseller, or even a teacher to instill the love of reading in others we care about.
A fascinating account of Theroux's travels along the U.S.-Mexican border and far into the interior in 2017 and 2018.
While his visits to migrant towns on both sides of the wall were interesting, along with endless accounts of the severe poverty and violence overshadowing everything, I most enjoyed the travelogues from his solo drives through the country. His descriptions of the landscapes, the smells of the towns, the taste of the food, and – above all – the people are without peer. He has a way of transporting the reader spiritually to anywhere he choses to write about.
You really do feel for the innocents that constitute the bulk of Mexico's population. This basically includes almost everyone apart from the police, the politicians, and the narcos and other gangsters that pervade modern Mexican society.
Throughout the book, Theroux references other writers and recommends so many additional books and articles to seek out should you have the interest. I kept finding myself typing different books into my search engine and added more than a few to my Goodreads Want List.
When I was much younger, I read several of Theroux's books in preparation for my own travel adventures. Some 20 years ago, I stopped travelling so much – having settled in southern Thailand where I remain to this day – and, sadly, stopped reading new Theroux books. This one proves that I have many that I need to catch up on!
I always learn a great deal while reading Steve Berry's novels (not to mention, his Facebook posts) and Cotton Malone #18 is no exception. This time around, I learned all about bitcoin and blockchains as well as the CIA's shady origins. The action is unrelenting with nail-biting thrills taking place simultaneously in multiple locations and chapters flowing into further chapters keeping this reader riveted far beyond his bedtime several nights in a row. As always, I sincerely appreciate Berry's Writer's Note at the end, separating the fiction from the facts. It is always amazing to find out how much of the latter propels the former.
This collection of essays delights with every passing page. It is a memoir of the author's reading life as well as guidelines for others to follow in their own reading lives. I loved the chapters on bookshelves and acknowledgments, to name but two of many. I have been tracking my reading for a number of years but am inspired by the last chapter to keep a more detailed reading journal to help me remember, to benefit my future self to paraphrase the author.
Highly recommended if you love books and reading them.
"What you seek is what you will find, but only if you hunt it with all your heart and mind."
"Not always," Emil said.
"Always," Corporal Gheorghe insisted.
The last book that I finished in 2024, The Last Green Valley by Mark Sullivan, echoes my chosen word of the year for 2025. It is essentially a novel about perseverance, the main characters keep moving forward even in the face of overwhelming difficulties and setbacks. It is also a story about love in a world of hate, a story that examines the human drive towards survival while keeping one's humanity intact while doing so.
I read this book to satisfy the December prompt in my Crossing Continents reading challenge -- a book set in eastern Europe. The novel starts out in a small village in Ukraine toward the end of World War II. Many residents of the farming community -- including our main characters, the Martel family -- are Volksdeutsche, the German community that the Czar had invited to Ukraine a century earlier because of their skill for growing winter wheat, feeding the Russian Empire. A branch of my own family came from this heritage although they were scattered to the winds following the First World War and the Russian Revolution, prior to Stalin's deportations of the farmers to Siberia which was one of the factors leading to the millions of deaths during the 1932-1933 famine. This added another layer to my fascination with this novel.
The Martels -- Adeline and Emil with their sons Walt and Will -- endeavor to escape Stalin's troops, bearing down on them, by reluctantly fleeing under the protection of the Nazis. Adeline has instilled in them all a dream of a lovely green valley surrounded by mountains with a river running through the middle. It is this dream that helps sustain them in their constant push through devastation and despair as armies battle, loss and retreats leading to changing fortunes with starvation and illness ensuing. Their faith -- strong, lost, rediscovered -- pushes them through unforeseen separations and intense loneliness.
It is the love that Adeline and Emil share towards each other and their sons that brighten the many trying periods in their journey, a journey that is very rarely going in the direction of their dream. The remarkable courage that Emil shows also sustains Adeline and this, in turn, is passed to the sons. The remainder of the extended family who begin the refugee march with them never share this courage nor the level of love and faith.
Author Mark Sullivan has stated that a tremendous amount of research went into this novel and it shows, right down to the accuracy in dates and weather for even minor events late in the war and the post-surrender period. The historical background adds to the rich tapestry of human emotions our attachment to Adeline and Emil Martel evoke in us, the reader.
I rate The Last Green Valley as my favorite book read in 2024, tied with The Book Woman's Daughter which I read much earlier in the year. An easy 5-star award on this one full of characters who persevere through not only their love and faith but a profound stubbornness that I share with them, albeit in much less dire circumstances.
"If you must look back, try to find the beauty and the benefit in every cruelty done to you. If you must think about the future, try to have no expectations about it."