Park Lake Page Turners
The current Park Lake Page Turners group is composed of over 20 people. We meet once a month to discuss the "book of the month" usually selected by me. Many of our selections have been "Book Bundles," multiple copies from our local library. Our start-up was January, 2008, following my retirement the year before. We rate each book between 1 and 5, with 5 being excellent. I also blog the books I read apart from the group selections.
Monday, September 15, 2025
Blue Marlin by Lee Smith
Sunday, September 14, 2025
Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH by Robert C. O'Brien
-Nicodemus, from the novel
This book is likely recommended for upper elementary students so why would this 70-something woman be reading it? I had discovered it as a 5th grade teacher, and it was a favorite of mine: a delightful fantasy with loveable animal characters. I needed something light and fun and Mrs. Frisby.. filled the bill. A rating of 5.
Mrs. Frisby is a mouse widow and mother of four, one of whom is very ill. She knows a wise mouse, Mr. Ages, who has cures to offer so she goes to seek his help. He gives her medicine for son Timothy but warns he will not completely recover for weeks. Further complicating matters the Frisbys will have to move soon because their home is in a field that will be plowed in early spring. She will need serious help to move the family.
After Mrs. Frisby rescues Jeremy the crow, he suggests the owl may have a solution to her problem and he flies her there. The owl is familiar with her name, having known of her late husband, Jonathan. The owl simply says, "You must go to the rats."
There is a group of rats who are seen going to and from a huge rosebush by the barn on the property of the Fitzgibbons, where the Frisbys also live. Mrs. F summons her courage and goes there. She eventually meets Nicodemus who tells her the story of the rats' escape from NIMH, National Institute for Mental Health, where they were kept in a lab and given injections for intelligence, strength and longevity. She also finds out how the rats were familiar with her husband.
You will have to discover the details for yourself.
Thursday, September 11, 2025
Two Old Men and a Baby by Hendrik Groen
"'Evert, Evert, Evert, what have you got us into now?' I knew my pal could sometimes be a bit impulsive, but this was especially ill-thought-out, even for him. A baby as a surprise Santa gift! I was finding it hard to hide my anger and irritation."
-from the novel
In March I read The Secret Diary of Hendrik Groen, 83 1/4 Years Old and loved it so much that I read a sequel, On the Bright Side, The New Secret Diary of Hendrik Groen. Both were very entertaining. When I noticed there was another by this Dutch author, I tried to find it in my local library and finally received it as an interlibrary loan. I didn't enjoy it quite as much as the other two, but it was a page-turner. I will rate it a 4.
Occurring 9 years before The Secret Diary setting, Hendrik and good buddy, Evert Duiker have a crazy, exciting adventure. The subtitle: Or How Hendrik and Evert Get Themselves into a Jam, hints of such.
Hendrik ducks into a school to use the restroom and finds an unsupervised baby asleep in a carriage. Without thinking he leaves with the carriage and when he comes to his senses, goes to Hendrik for help. See Hendrik's reaction above. Repeatedly they try to return the child to the parents with no success.Tuesday, August 26, 2025
The Zookeeper's Wife: A War Story by Diane Ackerman
Zookeeper and scientist Jan Zabinski said of his wife "She's so sensitive, she's almost able to read their minds...She becomes them...She has a precise and very special gift, a way of observing and understanding animals that's rare, a sixth sense...It's been this way since she was little."
-describing Antonina Zabinski, The Zookeeper's Wife
While very inspiring in some ways, the book is wearisome in others. After Germany invaded and bombed Warsaw, zookeepers Jan and Antonina Zabinski, with few animals left, began to take in and hide numerous Jewish refugees. Their efforts put them in grave danger if they were caught. Jan was even a member of the Polish resistance, a group who found ways to sabotage the Nazis in many creative ways. Both Jan and Antonina carried cyanide pills in case they were caught.
Although I have done a great deal of reading about the Holocaust and have visited the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., I learned things I didn't know from this book. I am always shocked by the tragic things that happened but also impressed by the number of people who helped and gave sanctuary to Jews at great risk to themselves and their families.
I prefer nonfictions that read like fiction, that is with dialogue making people seem more real. The best this author could do was to quote diaries, letters and interviews to personalize the characters. There were pages of description and numerous lists of animals, plants and other things, making the book tedious at times. In fact, I found I couldn't wait to finish it. I'll give it a 3 rating even though I was leaning toward a 2.
Apparently, there is a film adaptation. I need to see it one of these days to compare. I have a feeling it might be more compelling than the book.
Brainiac by Ken Jennings
-Ken Jennings, from Brainiac
This book is our Page Turners' August selection. I was disappointed I could not get a digital copy from the library. Fortunately, I got a copy in print from our local library. Before I received it, I heard from a few members of our group that they didn't like it much, so my expectations weren't high, but I actually did enjoy the book for the most part. Maybe you have to be a BIG Jeopardy fan to appreciate it---and that, I am, although not as obsessed as Ken and some other brainiacs!
The subtitle of this book gives a down and dirty summary: Adventure in the Curious, Competitive, Compulsive World of Trivia Buffs. I would say it is mostly a memoir relating the author's incredible success in trivia competitions, most notably on "Jeopardy!" in 2004 (75 games won---6 months---earning $2.5 million---unprecedented!) but with extensive research into trivia history. He also describes some of the current events in trivia culture, including "The World's Largest Trivia Contest" in Steven's Point, Wisconsin, of all places. Jennings' memories of his experiences were my favorite parts of the book, along with the fact that he embeds many trivia questions in each chapter with answers at the end. Fun to see how many answers I knew---and how many more I did not! Much of the history was far less interesting to me. My rating is 4 (more like 3 1/2).
On two pages I found several brief descriptions of trivia that were intriguing:
"Trivia is the marijuana of knowledge."
"[Trivia] ignites our curiosity about things we didn't think we were interested in."
"[Trivia] is bait on the fishing rod of education."
"The right trivia fact at the right time can do more than answer a Daily Double for you. It can change the way you think. It can change your life."
Saturday, August 9, 2025
The First Gentleman by Bill Clinton and James Patterson
"My client played NFL football for three years. He had the battle scars to prove it. And I believe he would tell you that it was nothing compared to the blood sport of national politics, where people will do anything and everything to gain advantage over the competition. Like rehashing old rumors. Trolling for coincidences. Playing on sympathies for a beautiful young woman who died too soon. Somebody has to pay, right?"
-Tess Hardy, defense attorney
This novel is most definitely a page turner! I read it in 3 days which is unusual for me. In fact, I could barely put it down!
There is a female U.S. president, Madeline Parson Wright, who is trying to fulfill campaign promises and make a positive difference for Americans when her husband, First Gentleman Cole Wright is arrested for the homicide of a young woman almost 2 decades before. While she is trying to get an important bill passed, dealing with international issues and worrying about her husband, Cole is being defended in court by Tess Hardy, a tough attorney. (quoted above)
Meanwhile investigative journalists/co-writers Garrett Wilson and Brea Cooke are tracking down every lead to try to prove Cole's guilt and gain material for the book they will write. But just as with most thrillers, someone is stealthily working to bring down the First Gentleman and the Wright administration along with him. And several people are killed while the reader is wondering WHO and WHY.
Although there were many characters to keep track of and some political stuff that was beyond my comprehension, I really enjoyed this novel. Rating: 5. The short chapters, many ending with cliffhangers, kept me turning pages rapidly.
Wednesday, August 6, 2025
Out of the Woods: A Girl, a Killer, and a Lifelong Struggle to Find the Way Home by Gregg Olsen
"Miss Garner told her boss right after Shasta's life story session that what she heard was so horrendous, so heart-breaking. She said she didn't get paid enough to listen to what happened to the little girl from up north in the Panhandle. It was that bad."