I bought a lot of books in Tucson, which is blessed with many bookshops. In fact, I bought so many that I had to mail three boxes back to me (Layla mailed one back to herself), and this is not even the complete list of what I bought. It does not, for instance, include any of the books from Bookman’s, a huge used bookstore. The register had Trump’s book Art of the Deal standing up. I turned it over so I wouldn’t have to look at his face. The woman at the register righted it, explaining apologetically that she’d get a bonus if she managed to unload it on someone!

From Book Stop, a used bookstore which proved to be a treasure trove of children’s books, some from my childhood which I lost and then never saw again for 30 years:

Haunting of Cassie Palmer, by Vivien Alcock. Ghost story recommended to me on DW.

The Fire Eaters, by David Almond. Magical realism, I think. I really liked his novel Kit’s Wilderness.

Project Cat, by Nellie Burchardt. Kids find a lost kitten. I hope it doesn’t die.

Winged Colt of Casa Mia, by Betsy Byars. FLYING HORSIE. I hope it doesn’t die.

Katie John and White Witch of Kynance, both historicals by Mary Calhoun. She wrote two of my favorite children’s books, The House of Thirty Cats and Magic in the Alley.

The Lost Star, by H. M. Hoover. (On Kindle.) I’ve never read anything by her but lots of people have fond memories of her books. Her books all seem to be on Kindle now.

Veronica Ganz, by Marilyn Sachs. (On Kindle.) Written in 1969, I remember this book as a serious look at bullying from the perspective of a girl bully, but what I was mostly interested in was the then-current but by my time of reading (early 80s) now-historical details of daily life.

From Antigone Books, a new indie bookstore:

The Chicken: A Natural History, by Joseph Barber. A gift for my step-mom, who raises chickens, but I’m going to read it first.

Pirate's Fortune (Supreme Constellations Book 4), by Gun Brooke. They had a shelf of F/F romances by Bold Strokes Books, which I don’t often see in their print incarnations, and I was so excited that I bought three of them.

Notorious pirate and mercenary Weiss Kyakh works as a reluctant double-agent for the Supreme Constellations. Her mission is to infiltrate a cutthroat band of space pirates along with a sentient bio-android, Madisyn Pimm.

Hopefully the books in this series are standalones because I have not read books 1-3. The prologue had Madisyn waking up in an android body and begging for death, but I’m guessing things look up from there.

Cool in Tucson (A Sarah Burke Mystery) , by Elizabeth Gunn. A mystery set in Tucson which Layla recommended; heroine is a cop.

Ghost Trio, by Lillian Irwin. An F/F Gothic! With a somewhat less-than-scary mansion name.

Lee Howe, a professional pianist, believes that if she can see the site where her beloved Devorah met her death, she will begin to accept that she must move on with her own life. Devorah Manikian had been rehearsing for a starring role in Carmen and was living in Eggerscliffe, a 1920s-style pseudo-castle belonging to wealthy and eccentric impresario, Annajean Eggers. Devorah was gone only a few weeks before Lee was notified that she was dead—killed in a tower fire at Eggerscliffe. But as Lee stands alone below the castle, she hears Devorah singing...

Endurance: My Year in Space, A Lifetime of Discovery, by Scott Kelly. A space memoir by Gabby Gifford’s husband.

The Cooking Gene: A Journey Through African American Culinary History in the Old South, by Michael W. Twitty. The bookshop person said the author had done an event there and was really nice.

You Make Me Tremble, by Karis Walsh. F/F romance.

Animal rescue worker Iris Mallery thinks she has created a stable and secure home for herself, but when her small town is battered by an earthquake, Iris needs to rebuild not only her own life, but the lives of the displaced dogs and cats now filling her shelter.

The last book I read by her inspired me to go to the Oregon Shakespeare Festival and I had a wonderful time. Hopefully this one will not inspire an earthquake.

Anyone read any of these and/or have opinions on what they’d most enjoy seeing a review of?
Set the Stage is an adorable fluffy romance between Emilie, an aspiring actress who just got cast at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in Ashland and Arden, a gardener working at the Ashland park. It's full of very accurate details about theatre (and seems very accurate about OSF in particular, at least as far as the layout of their theatres is concerned) and plants, and has a hilarious running joke about how every business in town attempts to get in on the theatre tourist business by slapping on random Shakespeare references. (Shockingly, no one ever makes a joke about "the Garden of Arden.")

In fact, this novel distinctly resembles a sort of FF Zoe Chant, minus the shifters. But it has lots of loving details of a setting, cozy togetherness, good food, shared activities, instant attraction, constant sexual awareness/tension between the characters, and a general air of comfort reading. It also has a lot of quirky details and problems that one encounters in real life but rarely in fiction, like the genuinely sweet boss at Emilie's crappy fast-food job, a geocaching date, and the horrible dilemma of what to say to your crush when you go see the play she's in and she's just not very good in the role.

It's a very charming book and I am now seriously considering a visit to the OSF. I was last there in high school and it was very formative. They have a super fun-looking play up this year about Shakespeare's buddies trying to reconstruct Hamlet from memory after his death. (i.e., the First Folio.)

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