The First 10 Books I Randomly Grabbed from My Shelf

Four weeks Deb on her blog Readerbuzz featured 10 random books from her shelf. I liked her idea so much a week later I did the same. Putting that post together was a lot of fun and after getting some positive feedback I decided to do it again. Earlier today I pulled 10 random books off my shelves and here they are. Just like last time I’m hoping this post will inspire me to finally crack of few open and give ’em a chance.

 

Inherit the Wind by Jerome Lawrence and Robert Edwin Lee (1955/1981 reprint) – A fictionalized account of the Scopes Monkey Trials, another book I bought years ago at a Friends of the Multnomah County Library book sale. In an interview with Bill Moyers on his show A World of Ideas British film producer David Puttnam mentioned how he enjoyed the 1960 film adaption because it was the first time he’d seen debate depicted in a movie. Also, like Jean Anouilh’s Becket one a handful of plays I own.

A Broken World, 1919-1939 by Raymond V. Sontag (1971) – Over the years I’ve been collecting assorted volumes of Harper Torchbook’s Rise of Modern Europe Series. Back in 2023 I featured Jacques Droz’s 1967 Europe Between Revolutions, 1815-1848. Like so many of my books I’m sure I grabbed this one at a Friends of the Multnomah County Library book sale.

A History of Capitalism, 1500-2000 by Michel Beaud (1983)- An old buddy gave me this book for my birthday years ago. One of many books I started but put down because I got distracted. Maybe it’s time to give it another chance.

The Battle for God: A History of Fundamentalism by Karen Armstrong (2001)-  Picked this up a used book sale at a Lutheran church up the street from my mom’s old house. With the growth of White Christian Nationalism in the United States I think it’s high time I finally read this.

The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love by Oscar Hijuelos (1989) – Bought this at a Friends of the Multnomah County Library book sale after an old college buddy recommended it. I hear the 1992 movie adaption is pretty good too.

Cadillac Desert: The American West and Its Disappearing Water by Marc Reisner (1993) – Bought this one at Powell’s after hearing glowing recommendations from multiple friends. Read several chapters before getting distracted and quitting. Another book I need to revisit in 2026.

Introduction to Philosophy by G.T.W. Patrick (1935) – Every summer the Lutheran church in nearby Independence, Oregon has a huge yard sale. A few years ago I grabbed this one along with a ton of other books for a song. After recently finishing Jostein Gaarder’s Sophie’s World I might be in the mood for more philosophy.

The Passion of the Western Mind: Understanding the Ideas That Have Shaped Our World View by Richard Tarnas (1991) – While leaving a Greek restaurant I saw I guy reading this while he waited for his bus. Intrigued by the title years later I bought a copy from Powell’s.

African Theology En Route: Papers from the Pan African Conference of Third World Theologians, December 17-23, 1977, Accra, Ghana edited by Kofi Appiah-Kubi and Sergio Sergio (1979) – One of many books published by Orbis Books I inherited from an old mentor of mine after he retired as a university chaplain. This one took some water damage after a heavy rainstorm overwhelmed my old apartment’s rooftop drainage system.

Fall of Giants by Ken Follett (2010) – The first book of a trilogy, I bought this one at a Friends of Independence (Oregon) Public Library book sale based on my sister’s recommendation. As some of you remember I have a weakness for historical fiction set during the first few decades of the 20th century.

There you go, 10 random books from my personal library. Who knows, at this rate this might wind up being regular feature on my blog. Stay tuned and find out.

Book Beginnings: In the Kingdom of Men by Kim Barnes

Not only does Gilion host the European Reading Challenge and TBR 25 in 25 Challenge on her Rose City Reader blog but also Book Beginnings on Friday. While I’m no stranger to her European Reading Challenge, a few years ago I decided to finally participate in Book Beginnings on Friday. After taking last week off I’ve returned with another post.

For Book Beginnings on Friday Gilion asks us to simply “share the opening sentence (or so) of the book you are reading this week, or just a book that caught your fancy and you want to highlight.”

MY BOOK BEGINNING

Here is the first thing you need to know about me: I’m a barefoot girl from red-dirt Oklahoma, and all the marble floors in the world will never change that. Here is the second thing: that young woman they pulled from the Arabian shore, her hair tangled with mangrove—my husband didn’t kill her, not the way they say he did.

Last week I featured Manal al-Sharif’s 2013 memoir Daring to Drive: A Saudi Woman’s Awakening. Before that it was Charles Belfoure’s 2013 historical novel The Paris Architect. This week it’s another historical novel, Kim Barnes’s 2012 historical thriller In the Kingdom of Men.

Like Tom Rob Smith’s The Secret Speech and Regina O’Melveny’s The Book of Madness and Cures this is another book I found last year in my public library’s discard bin. Set in Saudi Arabia in the 1960s I’m hoping it will serve as enjoyable follow-up reading to the earlier mentioned Daring to Drive as well as Zoë Ferraris’s City of Veils. To the best of my knowledge there isn’t a lot of historical fiction set in Saudi Arabia so I’m happy to finally read this one. I’ll be applying this novel towards both the Historical Fiction and Cloak and Dagger reading challenges.

Here’s what Amazon has to say about In the Kingdom of Men. 

1967. Gin Mitchell knows a better life awaits her when she marries hometown hero Mason McPhee. Raised in a two-room shack by her Oklahoma grandfather, a strict Methodist minister, Gin never believed that someone like Mason, a handsome college boy, the pride of Shawnee, would look her way. And nothing can prepare her for the world she and Mason step into when he takes a job with the Arabian American Oil company in Saudi Arabia. In the gated compound of Abqaiq, Gin and Mason are given a home with marble floors, a houseboy to cook their meals, and a gardener to tend the sandy patch out back. Even among the veiled women and strict laws of shariah, Gin’s life has become the stuff of fairy tales. She buys her first swimsuit, she pierces her ears, and Mason gives her a glittering diamond ring. But when a young Bedouin woman is found dead, washed up on the shores of the Persian Gulf, Gin’s world closes in around her, and the one person she trusts is nowhere to be found.

 

Book Beginnings: Daring to Drive by Manal al-Sharif

Not only does Gilion host the European Reading Challenge and TBR 25 in 25 Challenge on her Rose City Reader blog but also Book Beginnings on Friday. While I’m no stranger to her European Reading Challenge, a few years ago I decided to finally participate in Book Beginnings on Friday. After taking last week off I’ve returned with another post.

For Book Beginnings on Friday Gilion asks us to simply “share the opening sentence (or so) of the book you are reading this week, or just a book that caught your fancy and you want to highlight.”

MY BOOK BEGINNING

The secret police came for me at two in the morning. The second knock on the door quickly followed the first. They were loud, hard knocks the kind that radiate out and shake the doorframe.,

Last week I featured Charles Belfoure’s 2013 historical novel The Paris Architect. Before that it was Regina O’Melveny’s 2012 debut historical novel The Book of Madness and Cures. This week it’s Manal al-Sharif’s 2013 memoir Daring to Drive: A Saudi Woman’s Awakening.

Like the Paris Architect, Daring to Drive one of a half dozen books I borrowed last week at the public library. Wanting to read a few more memoirs before the end of the year I decided to take a chance on this one. I’m looking forward to reading a memoir by a Saudi writer for a change since it seems the majority of memoirs I’ve read from Middle Eastern authors have been Iranian.

Here’s what Amazon has to say about Daring to Drive. 

Manal al-Sharif grew up in Mecca the second daughter of a taxi driver, born the year strict fundamentalism took hold. In her adolescence, she was a religious radical, melting her brother’s boy band cassettes in the oven because music was haram: forbidden by Islamic law. But what a difference an education can make. By her twenties Manal was a computer security engineer, one of few women working in a desert compound built to resemble suburban America. That’s when the Saudi kingdom’s contradictions became too much to bear: she was labeled a slut for chatting with male colleagues, her school-age brother chaperoned her on a business trip, and while she kept a car in the garage, she was forbidden from driving on Saudi streets.

Manal al-Sharif’s memoir is an “eye-opening” (The Christian Science Monitor) account of the making of an accidental activist, a vivid story of a young Muslim woman who stood up to a kingdom of men—and won.

Library Loot: Fall Reading Edition

Even though I’m busy reading several books including Jostein Gaarder’s Sophie’s World: A Novel About the History of Philosophy and Regina O’Melveny’s The Book of Madness and Cures I couldn’t resist dropping by the library and borrowing more books. If I’m lucky I should be able to apply these towards the Historical Fiction, Cloak and Dagger, Nonfiction and of course, Library Love reading challenges.  As always there’s a huge tower of unread books by my reading chair begging for my attention so who knows if I’ll be able to read any of these in a timely matter – or at all. But hey you can never have enough books, right?

Library Loot is a weekly event co-hosted Claire from The Captive Reader and Sharlene from Real Life Reading to encourage bloggers to share the books they’ve checked out from the library. If you’d like to participate, just write-up your post, steal the Library Loot icon and link your post using the Mr. Linky on Sharlene’s blog.

Book Beginnings: City of Veils by Zoë Ferraris

Not only does Gilion host the European Reading Challenge and TBR 25 in 25 Challenge on her Rose City Reader blog but also Book Beginnings on Friday. While I’m no stranger to her European Reading Challenge, a few years ago I decided to finally participate in Book Beginnings on Friday. After taking last week off I’ve returned with another post.

For Book Beginnings on Friday Gilion asks us to simply “share the opening sentence (or so) of the book you are reading this week, or just a book that caught your fancy and you want to highlight.”

MY BOOK BEGINNING

    The woman’s body was lying on the beach. “Eve’s tomb,” he would later come to think of it, not the actual tomb in Jeddah that was flattened in 1928, to squash out any cults attached to her name, nor the same one that was bulldozed again in 1975, to confirm the point. This more fanciful tomb was a plain, narrow strip of beach north of Jeddah.

Two weeks ago I featured the 2013 memoir Beyond Belief: My Secret Life Inside Scientology and My Harrowing Escape by Jenna Miscavige Hill with Lisa Pulitzer. Before that it was Frank McCourt ‘s 1999 memoir Tis. This week it’s Zoë Ferraris’s 2010 murder mystery City of Veils.

As I pointed out in one of my previous Library Loot posts it’s been 12 years since I read Ferraris’s Kingdom of Strangers, the second novel in this trilogy. Next to Israel and Iran, I think Saudi Arabia is the most fascinating country in the Middle East and thus an excellent setting for a murder mystery. Naturally, I’m hoping to apply this one towards the Cloak and Dagger Reading Challenge. Who knows, if I end up enjoying City of Veils I’ll probably read the series’s first book Finding Nouf.

Here’s what Amazon has to say about City of Veils.

    When the body of a brutally beaten woman is found on the beach in Jeddah, the city’s detectives are ready to dismiss the case as another unsolvable murder-chillingly common in a city where the veils of conservative Islam keep women as anonymous in life as the victim is in death. If this is another housemaid killed by her employer, finding the culprit will be all but impossible.

Only Katya is convinced that the victim can be identified and her killer found. She calls upon her friend Nayir for help, and soon discovers that the dead girl was a young filmmaker named Leila, whose controversial documentaries earned her many enemies.

With only the woman’s clandestine footage as a guide, Katya and Nayir must confront the dark side of Jeddah that Leila struggled to expose: an underworld of prostitution, violence, exploitation, and jealously guarded secrets. Along the way, they form an unlikely alliance with an American woman whose husband has disappeared. Their growing search takes them from the city’s car-clogged streets to the deadly vastness of the desert beyond.

Library Loot: Historical Fiction Edition

Even though I’m trying to make my way through the 20 Books of Summer  and Big Book Summer reading challenges I couldn’t resist dropping by the library and borrowing more books. As some of you might remember I’ve been wanting to read more historical fiction, and not just stuff set during World War II. As usual there’s towers of unread books by my reading chair begging for my attention so who knows if I’ll be able to read any of these in a timely matter – or at all. But hey you can never have enough books, right?

Library Loot is a weekly event co-hosted Claire from The Captive Reader and Sharlene from Real Life Reading to encourage bloggers to share the books they’ve checked out from the library. If you’d like to participate, just write-up your post, steal the Library Loot icon and link your post using the Mr. Linky on Sharlene’s Blog.

Big Book Summer Reading Challenge: An African History of Africa by Zeinab Badawi

I’ve been wanting to read more books about Africa so it was hard to resist borrowing a copy of Zeinab Badawi’s 2024 An African History of Africa: From the Dawn of Humanity to Independence when I spotted it the other day at the public library. Based on the buzz it’s generated I approached it optimistically, eager to learn about Africa from an African perspective. Thanks to Badawi’s conversational style I whipped through An African History of Africa quickly, and in the end found it worthy of all the hype.

When discussing Africa many are tempted to ignore the continent’s north portion, assigning it to the greater Middle East or Mediterranean world based on the region’s prevailing Arab ethnicity and culture, as well as deep historical ties to Classical Europe. Badawi on the other hand embraces the entire continent, taking pride in Africa’s diverse religious and ethnic make-up and close ties to past and present to Europe and the Middle East. Her book is a product of both scholarly research and a series of extensive travels across the continent interviewing notables and subject matter experts and visiting countless historical sites. From the vicissitudes of ancient Egypt to today’s Egypt, along with Ethiopia joining the BRICS An African History of Africa is chronologically sweeping. In addition from the Fall of Carthage in present day Tunisia to the end of white minority rule in South Africa to King Leopold’s genocide in Congo to the ancient kingdoms of Great Zimbabwe Badawi covers the width and breadth of Africa.

We Westerners are horribly ignorant when it comes to African history, and this book goes a long way to remedy that. Not only are we reminded the ancient Egyptians were in fact Africans, their southern contemporaries the Kushites were no less impressive in their many accomplishments. You also probably didn’t know about Mansa Musa, emperor of Mali and the 14th century’s richest man in the world. Flushed with gold, he spent so much of it on a pilgrimage to Mecca he sparked runaway inflation as far as Europe, depressing the price of gold for two years. Ethiopia possess a rich religious history that has encompassed all three Abrahamic faiths including Judaism. It’s also home to Geʽez, one of Africa’s only two indigenously created alphabets and has the distinction of being the only African nation that was never colonized. Lastly there’s Angola’s Queen Nzinga, whose larger than life adventures battling rival Africans and encroaching Portuguese colonizers could be described as Game of Thrones meets Marvel’s Black Panther.

It’s an understatement to say the slave trade had a damaging effect on Africa, especially along its central coast. For over 300 years millions of Africans, almost all of them young and able bodied were shipped to the Americas. Not only was the continent drained of its most youthful and productive individuals  it set rival communities against each other fostering years of cross-ethnic mistrust, political instability and agricultural stagnation.

So too was the damage done in later centuries by colonization. By 1900 only Ethiopia and semi independent Liberia remained free. In Congo, initially run as the private estate of Belgium’s King Leopold close to half the native population died of overwork, starvation and abuse. Around the same time in what’s now Namibia, Germany perpetrated its own genocide, prefiguring the Holocaust of the World War II. Lastly, in the British-held areas in what’s now Kenya, Zimbabwe and South Africa native Africans were pushed off their lands, impoverished and forced to work for starvation wages on farms and in mines as virtual prisoners in their own homelands. Finally, when decolonization did come in places like French Algeria and British Kenya the process was long and bloody. Though politically independent white minority rule persisted in Rhodesia until 1979 and South Africa until 1994.

Badawi ends her book on an optimistic note. According the latest poling information for the first time ever an overwhelming majority of Africans identify as citizens of their respective countries as opposed to individual ethnic group. Such adherence of national identity is paramount to promoting political and ethnic stability, an essential foundation for economic growth. Africa is also a young continent with a population with an average age of 19. (Compared to 49 in Japan and 41 in the United Kingdom.) By the end of the century 40% of the world’s workers, producers and consumers will be African. Although 600 million Africans don’t have access to electricity 92% of Kenya’s electricity comes from renewables while electric busses roam its cities’ streets. In addition, 95% of Kenyan households use mobile banking as do 70% of African households overall.

 

Perhaps my only complaint is while Badawi brings to light the many atrocities Europeans inflicted upon their colonial subjects she glosses over those committed by a rogues gallery of African strongmen in the decades following independence. Many in the West might be familiar with the human rights abuses of Idi Amin, Muammar Gaddafi, Mobutu Sese Seko and Robert Mugabe but the continent has produced other lesser known yet still horrible monsters. Equatorial Guinea’s Francisco Macías Nguema, a dictator so ruthless and insane he murdered or drove into exile a third of the country’s population and was the inspiration for the evil President Kimba in Fredrick Forsyth’s novel The Dogs of War and its subsequent film adaptionJean-Bédel Bokassa, from the Central African Republic in the 1970s declared himself emperor, ordered protesting school children be machine-gunned down and practiced cannibalism by eating his executed political enemies. Understandably, a readable history of Africa that encompasses Lucy the Hominid to the election of Nelson Mandela can’t cover everything. To totally ignore these monsters by chalking it up to “bad governance” is like writing a history of Cambodia and neglecting to mention Pol Pot.

Are there be better histories of Africa? Probably. But you’ll be hard pressed to find one by an African, or anyone else for that matter so sweeping, readable and informative that vividly brings to life so much history that’s been overlooked, ignored and in some cases downright denied.

Library Loot: Fiction Plus One

Even though I’m trying to make my way through the 20 Books of Summer  and Big Book Summer reading challenges I couldn’t resist dropping by the library and borrowing more books. Three of these are fiction set outside the United States with the fourth a piece of nonfiction about the intersection of American politics and religion. As usual, I hope to apply as many of these books as possible to a variety of reading challenges.  Also as usual, there’s towers of unread books by my reading chair begging for my attention so who knows if I’ll be able to read any of these in a timely matter – or at all. But hey you can never have enough books, right?

Library Loot is a weekly event co-hosted Claire from The Captive Reader and Sharlene from Real Life Reading to encourage bloggers to share the books they’ve checked out from the library. If you’d like to participate, just write-up your post, steal the Library Loot icon and link your post using the Mr. Linky on Sharlene’s Blog.

20 Books of Summer 2025

When Cathy of 746 Books announced last year she’d no longer be hosting her annual 20 Books of Summer Reading Challenge I figured that was the end of it. But thanks to Helen of Helen’s Book Blog I learned mere days ago Annabel of AnnaBookBel and Emma of Words and Peace have kindly volunteered to serve as the challenge’s new co-hosts. Running  from June 1 to August 31 everyone is once again encouraged to  sign up to read 10, 15 or 20 books over the course of the summer and check in with folks along the way. Just like last year things are pretty flexible. You’re welcome to make a list or just work your way through your bookshelves. If you do make a list feel free to swap out books as you go. It’s just a fun way to spend summer putting a dent in your to be read pile (TBR).

For the summer of 2025 I’ve selected 20 books I’ve been wanting to tackle, some which for years. Unlike past years I’m not including books I’m already reading for the Big Book Summer Reading Challenge.

  1. The Origins Of The Second World War by A. J. P. Taylor (1969)
  2. Aristotle for Everybody: Difficult Thought Made Easy by Mortimer J. Adler (1961)
  3. Rats, Lice and History: A Biography of a Bacillus by Hans Zinsser (1963)
  4. Midnight in Siberia: A Train Journey into the Heart of Russia by David Greene (2014)
  5. The Personal Librarian by Marie Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray (2021)
  6. The Coming of the French Revolution by Georges Lefebvre (1967)
  7. The Politics of Chaos in the Middle East by Olivier Roy (2008)
  8. A Long Way Home by Saroo Brierley (2014)
  9. Lost in Translation: A Life in a New Language by Eva Hoffman (1990) 
  10. Embers by Sandor Marai (2002)
  11. ‘Tis: A Memoir by Frank McCourt (2000)
  12. Circles: Fifty Round Trips Through History, Technology, Science, Culture by James Burke (2000)
  13. Going to Extremes by Joe McGinniss (1980)
  14. Three Stations: An Arkady Renko Novel by Martin Cruz Smith (2010)
  15. The Backlash: Right-Wing Radicals, High-Def Hucksters, and Paranoid Politics in the Age of Obama by Will Bunch (2010) – On Kindle
  16. The Soviet Century by Moshe Lewin (2005) – On Kindle
  17. Darwin’s Cathedral: Evolution, Religion, and the Nature of Society by David Sloan Wilson (2002) – On Kindle
  18. Empty the Pews: Stories of Leaving the Church by Chrissy Stroop and Lauren O’Neal (2019) – On Kindle
  19. The Siberian Curse: How Communist Planners Left Russia Out in the Cold by Fiona Hill and Clifford G. Gaddy (2003)- On Kindle
  20. The Scheme: How the Right Wing Used Dark Money to Capture the Supreme Court by Sheldon Whitehouse (2022) – On Kindle

This is the perfect opportunity to dive into my personal library while also participating in a number of reading challenges, especially the TBR 25 in ’25 and Mt. TBR. With several of these books published prior to 1980 it’s also a great chance to work on my Old Books Reading Project. Looks like I’ve got no shortage of reading material this summer. Can’t wait to get started.

The Devils of Cardona by Matthew Carr

Like I mentioned earlier, back in 2016 while exploring the new books section at the main branch of my public library I came across a copy of Matthew Carr’s 2016 historical thriller The Devils of Cardona. I didn’t grab it that day but several years later I borrowed an ebook version through Overdrive only to give up half way through it. For the last couple of years however I’ve been wanting to give The Devils of Cardona another chance. Wanting something I could apply to multiple reading challenges I once again borrowed a Kindle edition through Overdrive, this time vowing to finish it. I’m happy to report I made do on my promise.

It’s 1584 and a local priest has been found murdered in a backwoods town in the province of Aragon not far from France. Early signs indicate it was committed by one of the area’s many Moriscos, former Muslims who chose to embrace the Catholic faith in order to remain in Spain. Fearful a Morisco uprising along the French border could threaten the kingdom’s well-being, as well as throw a monkey wrench into an upcoming royal visit the court of King Philip II dispatches magistrate Bernardo de Mendoza to investigate. Soon after arriving Mendoza learns the priest was a monster, sexually abusing women and girls and forever threatening Moriscos with the horrors of the Inquisition in order to extort money or other favors. Rumors abound of a mysterious “Redeemer”, a Muslim freedom fighter in the area seeking to liberate the Moriscos and help return them to their former faith. Before long tensions between Moriscos and “Old Christians” escalate with acts of violence being committed on both sides. Or so it seems.

An oasis within this turmoil appears to be the small realm of Cardona, ruled by its recently widowed Countess. Even her poorest subjects appear healthy and well nourished, and unlike their counterparts across the rest of Spain they aren’t reduced to wearing rags. Revered by Moriscos and Old Christians alike her reign is a benevolent one and her beauty striking. Protective of her subjects she’s appears hesitant to cooperate with Mendoza’s investigation but eventually lends her support. But Mendoza, a brave former soldier who’s faced death on both land and sea is sharp as a tack and can tell the Countess isn’t telling him everything.

If you asked me if I liked The Devils of Cardona I’d have to say yes. With Carr an historian it’s no wonder his novel feels well-researched. The plot is far from simple and involves a number of characters almost all of which play an essential role. There’s also an abundance of twists, intrigue and action, with a bit of romance here and there and a climactic battle scene reminiscent of The Seven Samurai. Not a bad way to read about 16th century Spain.