• New Events
  • Feed
  • Subject
    • Eat
    • Sleep
    • Visit
    • Read
    • Listen
    • Watch
    • Life
    • Moonridge
  • Trending
  • Karen
  • Privacy Policy
  • Subscribe

Always Packed for Adventure!

It's the destination and the journey.

  • New Events
  • Feed
  • Subject
    • Eat
    • Sleep
    • Visit
    • Read
    • Listen
    • Watch
    • Life
    • Moonridge
  • Trending
  • Karen
  • Privacy Policy
  • Subscribe

Book Review- Laurie Zaleski's Funny Farm

Thank you to NetGalley and St. Martin’s Press for a copy of Laurie Zaleski’s memoir, Funny Farm.

Running from an abusive marriage, Laurie Zaleski’s mom fled from her husband, taking a small amount of belongings and her three young children. Money was tight, but they managed to find a rental property in a rural area. The house was small and run down, a place that had been used for squatters and teenagers, but with her determination and upbeat attitude, Zaleski’s mom turned the place into a home where she would raise her children. The property was big enough that they started to amass an assortment of rescue animals, including a beloved horse whose broken leg they healed.

They were not able to move far from Zaleski’s father, who despite continuing to terrorize Zaleski’s mother, was granted partial custody of his children. Zaleski witnessed acts of cruelty inflicted by her father, who was wealthy and prominent in their local community.

Healing and comfort was found in their animal community. Animals, who like Zaleski’s family, were learning to regain trust after trauma. In her adult years, Zaleski would be pulled in two directions; leaving the farm to pursue city life or continue her mother’s work. It isn’t a spoiler to share that she chose a life on the farm and not only took on her mother’s animals, but bought a bigger property. Her rescue is thriving with volunteers and a large social media presence. Her instagram page for the Funny Farm Animal Sanctuary is absolutely delightful, a must-follow for animal lovers.

Funny Farm is a tough read. The rampant abuse; spousal, child, and animal, is hard. Trigger warning is an apt caution. That said, the love and compassion overshadow the abuse, ultimately allowing those abused to triumph. I connected with Zaleski’s pull towards different paths in her adult life, but ultimately following in her mother’s footsteps. Zaleski’s caregiving during her mother’s cancer, took me back to 2008, when I was in a similar position. I may not have a whole farm of rescue animals (just two spoiled cats) or have survived an abusive childhood, but I could relate to much of this memoir.

Funny Farm is a great choice for animal lovers who can stomach the difficult parts. Either way, make sure to visit the Funny Farm social media pages for adorable animal antics. If you’re in New Jersey, you can even visit the rescue and meet Zaleski!

tags: St Martins Press, NetGalley, Laurie Zaleski Memoir, Laurie Zaleski Funny Farm, Laurie Zaleski Funny Farm Animal Sanctuary, Animal Rescue New Jersey, Memoirs About Abuse, Memoirs with Trigger Warning, Memoirs About Animals, Memoirs About Abusive Childhoods, Memoirs About Abusive Relationships, Memoirs About Grief, Memoirs About Injured Animals, Animals on Social Media Funny Farm, Books for Animal Lovers, Best Book Covers, Best Memoirs 2021
categories: Book Review, Read
Thursday 06.16.22
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

Book Review- Tom Perrotta's Tracy Flick Can't win

Thank you to NetGalley and Scribner for a copy of Tom Perrotta’s Tracy Flick Can’t Win.

Perrotta returns to one of his most memorable characters, Tracy Flick, in this sequel to his best-selling novel, Election. In Tracy Flick Can’t Win, we find Flick in her forties, a divorced single-mother working as a high school vice-principal. When the long-time principal announces his upcoming retirement, Flick starts the interview process for the promotion. Her strong work-ethic, high morals, and innovative ideas still can’t manage to eclipse her inability to connect on a social level. Just like in high school, Flick sees her dreams slipping away as more popular/less qualified candidates take center stage.

Perrotta is one of my favorite authors and Election is one of my favorite books. I was thrilled that Perrotta was bringing back Tracy Flick. You do not have to read Election to enjoy Tracy Flick Can’t Win, however, I highly recommend it. This sequel was really written for fans and having the context of Flick’s struggles in her teen years, makes the sequel more poignant. Flick becomes an everyone woman in her struggles, as she faces many micro aggressions and flat-out dismissals from the men in the story. As a woman, reading this felt like a jab from a sharp needle and it make me recall times in my life where I suffered similar treatment. Flick isn’t a likable character. If I met her in real life, I’d find her to be very grating. However, she is also a person who suffers a lot of misfortune and who tries to do the right thing, only to see that she really can’t win. This makes me root for her to succeed.

Tracy Flick Can’t Win is not Perrotta’s finest work, but it is certainly a book that I wanted to read. It was the 2022 new book release that I was most excited to read. Fans are going to be thrilled and if you’re a fan, you must read it. It did not disappoint. I’d love a third Flick sequel or maybe a follow-up to another character from Election.

tags: Tracy Flick Character, Tracy Flick Can't Win Book Review, Election Tom Perrotta, Tracy Flick Can't Win Tom Perrotta, Tom Perrotta Author, Tom Perrotta Author Election Sequel, Feminist Books, MeToo Novels, Netgalley, Scribner, Tracy Flick for President, Best Novels 2022, Summer Reads 2022, Unlikable Characters Tracy Flick, Bookseller Review, Bookseller Blog, Book Blogger, Book Sequels, Socially Inept Characters, Plot of Tracy Flick Can't Win, Summer Reads 2022 List
categories: Book Review, Read
Tuesday 06.14.22
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

Book Review- Ocean Vuong's Time is a Mother

Thank you to LibroFM and Penguin Random House Audio Publishing Group for a copy of Ocean Vuong’s poetry collection, Time is a Mother.

I knew nothing about Ocean Vuong or this particular book, other than it had been highlighted as an April 2022 Indy Next List pick and was on prominent display at the bookstore where I work. I didn’t even realize that it was a poetry collection. I enjoy poetry, but generally I like to have a physical copy and read it aloud to enjoy the way the prose trips off my tongue and to engage with the rhythm of the piece. I rarely listen to poetry being read, but in this case, it was a potent surprise.

Vuong narrates Time is a Mother, allowing me to appreciate his works through his own voice, including his intended emphasis and pacing. I quickly realized that I would not be able to listen and do housework, as I normally do with audio books, so I got cozy on my couch and closed my eyes, listening to the entire work in one sitting.

I was stunned by Voung’s gorgeous prose and raw personal revelations. Voung covers a myriad of topics, including the immigrant experience, suicide, relationships, and the death of his mother. Having a personal connection to both family suicide and a mother dying of cancer, I intensely related to these two topics. Vuong mentions his mother throughout, but one particular poem, which is written in a list format of Amazon shopping purchases, reflecting the decline of his mother’s health, is particularly poignant.

Time is a Mother was an intense experience. The audio book is less that two hours, but I have spent days thinking about Voung’s words. I highly recommend this incredible poetry collection.

tags: Ocean Vuong, Ocean Vuong Writer, Ocean Vuong Poet, Ocean Vuong Time is a Mother, Time is a Mother Poetry Collection, Indy Next List April 2022, Librofm, Penguin Random House Audio Publishing Group, Best Poetry Collection 2022, Losing Mother to Cancer, Poetry About Grieving, Poetry About Losing Parent, Poetry about Suicide, Vietnamese American Writers, Vietnam War Poetry, Petry About Immigrant Experience, Must Read Poetry, List Poetry, How to Enjoy Poetry, Ocean Vuong Audio Book, LBGTQ Authors, LGBTQ Poets, How to best Enjoy Poetry, Reading Poetry Aloud
categories: Book Review, Read
Monday 06.13.22
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 
Newer / Older

Powered by Squarespace 6