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JulieLill's 2022 Reading Challenge
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Rachel
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May 01, 2022 03:43PM

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I hope you enjoy it. Ben Affleck is great and the actor that plays the kid is amazing.

I hope you enjoy it. Ben Affleck is great and the actor that plays the kid is amazing."
Our library can't get a copy of it for me. Oh well!


The Cement Garden
Ian McEwan
4/5 stars
When their parents died, four children were left behind in their home. Though they were capable of informing the authorities, they stayed in the house doing whatever they wished. I do like McEwen and his dark stories. 1978






The Brown's Chicken Massacre
Maurice Possley
4/5 stars
Maurice Possley discusses the shockingly, true story of the massacre of the staff of a Brown's Chicken in Illinois, as they closed down the store one night in January of 1983. It took 10 years and advances in DNA testing before they could solve the case. Well researched and written. True Crime

Agree 100%


The Brown's Chicken Massacre
Maurice Possley
4/5 stars
Maurice Possley discusses the shockingly, true story of the ma..."
I have a friend that likes to read true crime books. I'll pass the title on to her . Thanks, Julie.



Wizard of Oz: An Over-the-Rainbow Celebration of the World's Favorite Movie
Ben Nussbaum
4/5 stars
This is a short book celebrating the movie - The Wizard of Oz. The author discusses a myriad of topics on the film, the actors who performed and even talks about the Broadway musical - Wicked. Definitely for fans of the movie.
This was not on my TBR list for this year but somehow I found this book and could not pass it up. It is a short read, lots of pictures and lots of information about the movie.


Not a Penny More, Not a Penny Less
Jeffrey Archer
3/5 stars
Four men are swindled in an investment by Harvey Metcalfe, a wealthy man who has no remorse. The men get together to take him down and get their money back. Not my favorite of the Archer books but I enjoyed it. 1976


My favorite books of Archer was his three book series -
Kane and Abel -(1979)
The Prodigal Daughter - (1982)
Shall We Tell the President?- (1977)
This was the chronological order of the series.
I don't remember if I read the series in order.
Here is a web page of all his books.




The Great Train Robbery
Michael Crichton
4/5 stars
Set in Victorian London, Edward Pierce sets up a crime with his cohorts to steal a gold shipment that will be traveling by steam train. But will they succeed? Very clever and a fast read! 1975



Where Are the Children?
Mary Higgins Clark
4/5 stars
Years ago, Nancy Harmon was accused of killing her children. However, her sentence was overturned, allowing her to start her life over again. Married with two new children, she feels her life is more settled. But once again, her life is in turmoil when her new children are missing and she is suspected in their disappearance. I enjoyed this book and it kept me reading to see how it was going to end. Mary Higgins Novel



The Little Girl Who Fought the Great Depression: Shirley Temple and 1930s America
John F. Kasson
4/5 stars
Kasson relates the story Shirley Temple, one of the most popular child actress� of her time period amidst the background and history of the Great Depression. He explores the films she was in, her popularity with the public who had sent her four thousand letters a week at the height of her fame and her parents who supported her but also spent most of her money, leaving her very little after her career was over.
I read this before and didn't realize it till I got farther into the book but I enjoyed reading it again. L

Saw this online:
"So, you can imagine the surprise of Shirley Temple, an adult at the time, when she discovered her accounts only showed $44,000 instead of the $3.2 million she had earned. Her father had allegedly failed to place her earnings as a child star in a court-ordered trust."
"The Jackie Coogan Law ensures the financial well-being of child actors by mandating that their employer set aside 15% of the child actor's gross earnings in a Coogan Trust Account, where it can be monitored � but not withdrawn � by a legal guardian until the child reaches legal maturity."
"Coogan eventually sued his mother and former manager for his earnings. As a result, in 1939, the Coogan Law was put into effect, presumably to protect future young actors from finding themselves in the same terrible situation that Jackie Coogan was left in."
.

Saw this online:
"So, you can imagine the surprise of Shirley Temple, an adult at the time, when she ..."
I don't think there were any charges against her parents. They did not work at all while she was acting, I guess they felt that they were owed that by managing her career. The weird thing was that there were laws enacted because of Jackie Coogan losing all his money because of his parents spending it. Child actors are better managed now but you still hear of them being taken advantage of.


The Last Wish
Andrzej Sapkowski
4/5 stars
There are several books in this series and according to one source this book was first book to read. Geralt of Rivia is a witcher (bounty hunter). He uses his magical powers to protect fiends from hurting others. He sometimes travels with a friend named Dandelion who helps him out. I enjoyed this book and look forward to reading the others in the series. The Witcher Series Book One
Fun Fact -In the TV series, they changed the name of Dandelion to Jaskier, which is the character's name in Polish.


A Woman of No Importance: The Untold Story of the American Spy Who Helped Win World War II
Sonia Purnell
5/5 stars
This is the amazing story of Virginia Hall, a woman who had lost her leg in a hunting accident at the age of 27 and who ended up becoming a spy in World War II for the SOE (Special Operations Executive), helping to organize and aid the French Resistance. After the war, she ended up working for the CIA. Highly recommended! 1979


[book:A Woman of No Importance: The Untold Story of the American Spy Who Helped Win W..."
Julie, I had this on hold at the library and for some reason I let it expire. Now that I see you gave it 5 stars I'll have to put it back on my TBR. Thanks !


The Plague Dogs
Richard Adams
3/5 stars
Written by the author of Watership Down, this is the story of two dogs, Rowf and Snitter, who live in a research testing facility in England where they have been experimented on and handled cruelly by the men who work there. One day, a handler did not lock them in properly and they escape from the facility causing great consternation that they may be carrying the plague and a huge man hunt for the animals ensues. I loved Adam’s Watership Down but I found that this book dragged on too long. 1977


I do love a good biography and this was not a disappointment.


This is Going to Hurt: Secret Diaries of a Junior Doctor
Adam Kay
5/5 stars
This is the diaries that Adam Kay kept while being a resident in the National Health Service in the UK. After 12 years in school and working as a doctor, he quit his job. Fortunately for him, he wrote this book and ended up selling about 1.5 million books. I enjoyed this immensely and could empathize with him and the pain he dealt with treating the sick and their families, working non-stop, missing meals and sleep, dealing with administrators and the constant change in policies. Great book! Diary


This is Going to Hurt: Secret Diaries of a Junior Doctor
Adam Kay
5/5 stars
This is t..."
This is nice.
"Dear NHS", edited by Adam Kay, was an instant Sunday Times number one with all profits donated to charity.
Even though it's not perfect. I wish we had something like the NHS here in the U.S..


When my second child got into kindergarten, I had found a job at the library in circulation and tech services part time and I am in my 21st year of working there. I originally wanted to be a librarian but didn't think I could support myself working at a library which is still true. Most of the library staff is part time. I feel bad for them cause it is not easy getting a full time job in that area.
I do have friends still in nursing. One of my friend's hospital had a riot in the street, a couple of months ago which spilled into her hospital one night. Luckily, she was home that night.

The issue at end-of-shift charting seems wrong-headed. One marvels that institutions could get away with that, presuming staff had to work beyond their shift hours. I'm sure you feel relieved to be out of it.
I'm glad you shared this with us, Julie. It points out so much about the some of the services most of us use, such as hospitals and libraries. The public is grateful but the respect they get from their employers and taxpayers (the low salaries you mentioned) is wanting. I keep hoping we'll get better but the economics at present don't indicate this will happen anytime soon.
Deborah
*stepping off soapbox*

I don't think we will ever see a perfect health system anywhere. Nurses, doctors and other health care professionals should be celebrated for staying in the system and trying to change it.



Unruly Places: Lost Spaces, Secret Cities, and Other Inscrutable Geographies
Alastair Bonnett
4/5 stars
While most of us live in suburbs, cities and in the countryside, Bonnett explores the unusual places that people live in, including cities that have changeable boundaries, islands where people live on that can disappear and reappear with the changing of sea levels, people who live on ships year round and he also discussed the re-population of cities that had been abandoned like Chernobyl and Wittenoom in Australia which was closed due to asbestos which was mined there. Very interesting! Geography
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