Library Loot

Even though still I’m working my way through Moudhy Al-Rashid’s Between Two Rivers: Ancient Mesopotamia and the Birth of History, Alexandra Richie’s Warsaw 1944: Hitler, Himmler, and the Warsaw Uprising and about to start Sheldon Whitehouse’s The Scheme: How the Right Wing Used Dark Money to Capture the Supreme Court that didn’t stop me from dropping by the library late last week and borrowing four more books. As always I hope to apply these towards a number of reading challenges. Looks like that towering stack of library books by my reading chair isn’t going away anytime soon and just got a bit taller.

The Ice Child by Camilla Lackberg (2016) – Like I mentioned in my previous post I’m 150 pages into this one and really liking it. I’ll be applying this piece of Swedish crime fiction towards the Books in Translation, European, Cloak and Dagger and Library Love reading challenges.

The Only Woman in the Room by Marie Benedict (2019) – After having good luck with The Other Einstein and The Personal Librarian I thought I’d give Benedict’s historical novel about the amazing life of Austrian-born actress and inventor Hedy Lamarr a try. In addition to the above mentioned European and Library Love reading challenges I’m hoping to read this one for the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge.

Outrage by Arnaldur Indridason (2012) – From Operation Napoleon to The Shadow District to Black Skies I’ve enjoyed the Scandinavian crime fiction of Icelandic author Arnaldur Indridason. Like The Ice Child I’ll be reading this one for multiple reading challenges.

The Postcard by Anne Berest (2023) – There’s no shortage of historical fiction set in France during World War II. However,  in the English-speaking world anyway almost all of it is by American and British authors. Berest is French and her award-winning novel received tons of accolades and looks quite promising.

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 Claire’s blog.

Agent Sonya: Moscow’s Most Daring Wartime Spy by Ben Macintyre

For the last couple of years I’ve heard nothing but great things about espionage author Ben Macintyre. So last October I decided to give him a chance and borrowed a copy of his 2020 book Agent Sonya: Moscow’s Most Daring Wartime Spy. Sadly, after a promising start I got distracted by another book and had to return it to the library after reading just a few dozen pages. Recently, after finding myself in the mood for more spy stuff I gave the book another shot. This time I quickly whipped through Agent Sonya from cover to cover. Not only did I enjoy it, I’m fully confident Agent Sonya will go down as one of my favorite books of 2026.

Born Ursula Kuczynski in 1907 in the Schöneberg district of Berlin by the time she reached young adulthood Ursula found herself passionately at odds with Germany’s Weimar regime. A member of the German Communist Party of Germany (KPD), her participation in a May Day demonstration would get her fired from her position at a Berlin publishing house. But after a brief stint in New York City she returned to Germany where she married fellow party member and up and coming architect Rudolf Hamburger, and later the two relocated to Shanghai. There she rubbed shoulders with several prominent fellow travelers but it was one in particular, fellow German and super spy Richard Sorge who helped put her on the path to being a spy. After undergoing training in Moscow Ursula retuned to Shanghai and served as the Kremlin’s ears and eyes in China. She would spend the following years transmitting coded intelligence dispatches to the USSR while managing to stay one step ahead of Chinese Nationalist, and later Japanese spy catchers.

Over the next few decades she criss-crossed Europe spying for the Soviet Union earning the rank of colonel in the Red Army. She was also married twice and had three children with three different men, all of different nationalities (a German, Baltic Russian and an Englishman). Miraculously, unlike countless others in the Soviet military and intelligence services she was never recalled to Moscow and shot or imprisoned. (However, her former husband wasn’t so lucky and was imprisoned for years in the Gulag.) Indeed luck was on her side, since had it not been for the utter incompetence of a high-ranking MI-5 officer she almost certainly would have been apprehended while spying in England.

It was in England that Ursula pulled off her greatest espionage coup. Serving as spy handler for refugee German physicist Klaus Fuchs she facilitated the transfer of reams of intelligence to the USSR that helped jump start its nuclear weapons program, thus allowing it develop an atomic bomb years ahead of schedule. Eventually, realizing her luck was running out she slipped out of England and resurfaced in East Germany. Ursula lived out the rest of her life in the communist state and even wrote a best-selling autobiography recalling her globe-trotting adventures.

Agent Sonya is a fun read and perfect for spy aficionados and history buffs alike. Please consider it highly recommended.

Book Beginnings: A Bookshop in Berlin by Françoise Frenkel

Not only does Gilion host the European Reading Challenge and TBR 26 in 26 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

I don’t know exactly when I first felt the calling to be a bookseller. As a very young girl, I could spend hours leang through a picture book or a large illustrated tome.

Last week I featured Moudhy Al-Rashid’s 2025 Between Two Rivers: Ancient Mesopotamia and the Birth of History. Before that it was David Greene’s 2014 Midnight in Siberia: A Train Journey into the Heart of Russia. This week it’s Françoise Frenkel’s 2019 A Bookshop in Berlin: The Rediscovered Memoir of One Woman’s Harrowing Escape from the Nazis.

Just like last week, if this book looks familiar it’s because I featured it last month in the same Library Loot post. It was hard for me to resist A Bookshop in Berlin for several reasons. One, I have a weakness for books about, or novels set in bookstores.  Two, I can apply this book towards a number of reading challenges including the Bookish Books, Books in Translation and Immigration reading challenges. Three, who can say no to a book originally published in 1945 that was forgotten but later rediscovered tucked away in an attic almost 60 years later? No wonder I can’t to dive in to this intriguing memoir.

Here’s what Amazon has to say about A Bookshop in Berlin.

In 1921, Françoise Frenkel—a Jewish woman from Poland—fulfills a dream. She opens La Maison du Livre, Berlin’s first French bookshop, attracting artists and diplomats, celebrities and poets. The shop becomes a haven for intellectual exchange as Nazi ideology begins to poison the culturally rich city. In 1935, the scene continues to darken. First come the new bureaucratic hurdles, followed by frequent police visits and book confiscations.

Françoise’s dream finally shatters on Kristallnacht in November 1938, as hundreds of Jewish shops and businesses are destroyed. La Maison du Livre is miraculously spared, but fear of persecution eventually forces Françoise on a desperate, lonely flight to Paris. When the city is bombed, she seeks refuge across southern France, witnessing countless horrors: children torn from their parents, mothers throwing themselves under buses. Secreted away from one safe house to the next, Françoise survives at the heroic hands of strangers risking their lives to protect her.

Book Beginnings: Twelve Mighty Orphans by Jim Dent

Not only does Gilion host the European Reading Challenge and TBR 26 in 26 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 redbrick buildings of the old Masonic Home are boarded up and the place is now quiet. Down the hill, the dairy barn is closed, the peach orchard has withered away, and the empty practice
field is the color of summer hay.

Last week I featured Danish author Kim Leine’s 2022 work of historical fiction The Colony of Good Hope. Before that it was Gordon Corera’s 2019 Russians Among Us: Sleeper Cells, Ghost Stories, and the Hunt for Putin’s Spies. This week it’s Jim Dent’s 2007 book Twelve Mighty Orphans: The Inspiring True Story of the Mighty Mites Who Ruled Texas Football.

If this week’s selection looks familiar it’s because I featured this book back in November as one of 10 random books I grabbed off the shelf. As I mentioned in the post this book was given to me a number of years ago by my dear friend Tom Andrews Sr. Over the course of his long and distinguished career he wore many hats including president of the California Historical Society and dean of Westmont College. The father of a good friend of mine, we first met when he was in the twilight of his career teaching history at Azusa Pacific University while handling the library’s rare book acquisitions. Whenever the two of us visited we’d talk about books for hours, and after every session my to be read list (TBR) grew massively. If he recommended a book you KNEW it was good.

Unfortunately, last Saturday his son texted me to let me this good man had passed away. With that in mind I’d like to honor him with this post. Hopefully, over the course of 2026 I’ll continue honoring his memory by featuring more books he’s recommended to me over the course of our wonderful conversations.

Here’s what Amazon has to say about Twelve Mighty Orphans.  

More than a century ago, a school was constructed in Fort Worth, Texas, for the purpose of housing and educating the orphans of Texas Freemasons. It was a humble project that for years existed quietly on a hillside east of town. Life at the Masonic Home was about to change, though, with the arrival of a lean, bespectacled coach by the name of Rusty Russell. Here was a man who could bring rain in the midst of a drought. Here was a man who, in virtually no time at all, brought the orphans’ story into the homes of millions of Americans.

In the 1930s and 1940s, there was nothing bigger in Texas high school football than the Masonic Home Mighty Mites―a group of orphans bound together by hardship and death. These youngsters, in spite of being outweighed by at least thirty pounds per man, were the toughest football team around. They began with nothing―not even a football―yet in a few years were playing for the state championship on the highest level of Texas football. This is a winning tribute to a courageous band of underdogs from a time when America desperately needed fresh hope and big dreams.

Book and Dagger: How Scholars and Librarians Became the Unlikely Spies of World War II by Elyse Graham

Like I wrote in an earlier post after hearing Elyse Graham, the author of Book and Dagger: How Scholars and Librarians Became the Unlikely Spies of World War II interviewed on On the Media I knew I had to read her book. Anything that combines books, libraries and World War II-era espionage sounds too good to pass up. So last July when Amazon slashed the price of the Kindle edition I snapped one up. Last week I went to work reading it and found Graham’s quick-paced book entertaining and enlightening.

One wouldn’t know it today but when the United States entered World War II it was a nation without a spy agency. While the Army and Navy possessed intelligence divisions and the State Department undoubtedly had a few personnel here and there with their ears to the ground there was no centralized agency staffed by professionals dedicated to gathering and analyzing intelligence, let alone countering the machinations of foreign spies. If the United States was to defeat the Axis powers it needed to create a new spy agency virtually overnight.

Seeking experts in an array of fields including physics, history, geography and foreign languages agents of the newly-formed Office of Strategic Services (OSS) fanned out among America’s universities and libraries enlisting professors, librarians and scientists. A wartime America needed these subject matter experts who were well trained to read mountains of material quickly, ascertain its worthiness, synthesize and report their findings. But perhaps above all they had an uncanny knack for knowing what information was needed and how to get it.

One of my favorite scholars to answer the call was library archivists Adele Kibre. Sent to Stockholm in neutral Sweden she acquired hard to get documents ranging from German scientific papers to Norwegian underground newspapers. Brilliant and multilingual, the daughter of movie set designers procured needed materials while charming various officials in her mid-American Hollywood movie accent with tales of silver screen gossip. Like a skilled judo player able to use an opponent’s greater weight to her advantage she employed the sexism of her day by making purposely incorrect statements only to let the man correct her with the correct, and sought-after information.

Another was Joseph Curtiss, a fledgling literature professor from Yale.  Anxious to make tenure he instead accepted the OSS’s employment offer and was sent to Istanbul. Upon arrival he assumed the persona of an academic sent abroad to acquire rare books. Unfortunately, around the time his American handler was recalled to the US for incompetence. (Legend has it whenever Curtiss’s bumbling superior walked into his favorite Istanbul nightclub the house band would strike up the song “I’m a spy.”) Curtiss, now alone and without orders nevertheless went about his mission undeterred filling his flat with towers of rare books procured from the shops and bazaars and Istanbul. He would later be instrumental in recruiting double agents and gathering priceless intelligence.

In hindsight ,America’s wartime decision to create the OSS was a monumental one. After World War II’s conclusion the OSS would give birth to today’s CIA, the world’s (at least for now) premier spy agency. Military victories made possible thanks to helpful information gleaned from phone books, dusty old maps and railroad timetables showed the vital usefulness of open source intelligence, and every spy agency since then has valued it seriously. Lastly, this close working relation between higher education and the OSS would help reshape colleges and universities across America as they added Area Studies specializing in the Middle East, Eastern Europe and East Asia.

For espionage aficionados and World War II buffs alike Book and Dagger is a fun read. Don’t be surprised come December if it makes my list of Favorite Nonfiction.

Book Beginnings: Russians Among Us by Gordon Corera

Not only does Gilion host the European Reading Challenge and TBR 26 in 26 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

It was humid enough for haze to rise off the tarmac as fourteen people crossed paths for a few brief moments at Vienna airport on July 9, 2010. The fourteen—all accused of being spies—were changing planes but also exchanging lives.

Last week I featured Elyse Graham’s 2024 New York Times best-seller Book and Dagger: How Scholars and Librarians Became the Unlikely Spies of World War II. Before that it was John le Carré’s 2003 spy novel Absolute Friends. This week it’s Gordon Corera’s 2019 Russians Among Us: Sleeper Cells, Ghost Stories, and the Hunt for Putin’s Spies.

As I mentioned earlier one of my many reading goals for 2026 is to read more books on espionage. After finishing Book and Dagger I was in the mood for additional cloak and dagger stuff and remembered buying a Kindle version of Russians Among Us last March. After starting it early this morning I’m pleased to report there’s a darn good chance this book will go on to make my year-end list of Favorite Nonfiction. It’s also inspired to me to check out the much talked about podcast The Rest is Classified which author Corera co-hosts with best-selling spy author David McCloskey.

Here’s what Amazon has to say about Book and Dagger. 

With intrigue that rivals the best le Carré novels, Russians Among Us tells the explosive story of Russia’s espionage efforts against the United States and the West—from the end of the Cold War to the present.

Spies have long been a source of great fascination in the world of fiction, but sometimes the best spy stories happen in real life. Russians Among Us tells the full story of Putin’s escalating espionage campaign in the West, the Russian ‘deep cover’ spies who penetrated the US and the years-long FBI hunt to capture them. This book also details the recruitment, running, and escape of one of the most important spies of modern times, a man who worked inside the heart of Russian intelligence.

Library Loot

Even though I’m working my way through Elyse Graham’s Book and Dagger: How Scholars and Librarians Became the Unlikely Spies of World War II as well as Kim Leine’s The Colony of Good Hope, and about to start Fareed Zakaria’s Age of Revolutions: Progress and Backlash from 1600 to the Present didn’t stop me from dropping by the library the other day and borrowing more books. As always I hope to apply these towards a number of reading challenges. So add four more to that towering stack of library books by my reading chair.

A Bookshop in Berlin: The Rediscovered Memoir of One Woman’s Harrowing Escape from the Nazis by Françoise Frenkel (2019) – I’m looking to apply this one towards multiple reading challenges including the Bookish Books and Immigration reading challenges.

Between Two Rivers: Ancient Mesopotamia and the Birth of History by Moudhy Al-Rashid (2025) – Years ago I used to get a lot of ancient history. I think I’d like to start doing that again.

The Ottomans: Khans, Caesars, and Caliphs by Marc David Baer (2021) – One of several books about the Ottoman Empire and Turkey I’m hoping to read in 2026.

An Honorable German by Charles McCain (2009) – Another piece of historical fiction for The Intrepid Reader‘s Historical Fiction Reading Challenge. Something about this book just made me wanna grab it.

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 Claire’s blog.

Book Beginnings: Book and Dagger by Elyse Graham

Not only does Gilion host the European Reading Challenge and TBR 26 in 26 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 call to adventure came in libraries, in faculty offices, at campus football games. Few of those called were remotely prepared for this moment.

Last week I featured John le Carré’s 2003 spy novel Absolute Friends. Before that it was Franklin Foer’s 2004 How Soccer Explains the World: An Unlikely Theory of Globalization. This week it’s Elyse Graham’s 2024 New York Times best-seller Book and Dagger: How Scholars and Librarians Became the Unlikely Spies of World War II.

As I mentioned earlier, one of my many reading goals for 2026 is to read more books on espionage. After hearing the author Elyse Graham interviewed on the On the Media podcast I knew this had to be one of those books. Once Amazon slashed the price of its Kindle edition back in July I eagerly grabbed a copy. Currently I’m about half way through it and quite happy with my purchase. There’s even a darn good chance it ends up making my year-end list of Favorite Nonfiction.

Here’s what Amazon has to say about Book and Dagger. 

At the start of WWII, the U.S. found itself in desperate need of an intelligence agency. The Office of Strategic Services (OSS), a precursor to today’s CIA, was quickly formed—and, in an effort to fill its ranks with experts, the OSS turned to academia for recruits. Suddenly, literature professors, librarians, and historians were training to perform undercover operations and investigative work—and these surprising spies would go on to profoundly shape both the course of the war and our cultural institutions with their efforts.

2025 In Review: My Favorite Nonfiction

I apologize for the lateness of this post. After being distracted by a million different things here’s my favorite nonfiction books of 2025. Of course if this post looks familiar it’s because it’s pretty much this same darn thing I posted back in November for my Nonfiction Year in Review. As you can see this year’s selection is a mishmash of history, politics, infectious disease and memoir. And if you’ve been following my blog for any length of time you probably know that’s pretty much the kind of books I read.

My Favorites 

For 2026 I’m hoping to read more espionage, history and memoirs. In response to our current political predicament I’m also planning in reading more political stuff. By year’s end I guess we’ll see how well I stuck to those intentions.

Book Beginnings: How Soccer Explains the World by Franklin Foer

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

Red Star Belgrade is the most beloved, most successful soccer team in Serbia. Like nearly every club in Europe and Latin America, it has a following of unruly fans capable of terrific violence. But at Red Star the violent fans occupy a place of honor, and more than that.

Last week I featured Nobel Prize-winning author Saul Bellow’s 1959 novel Henderson the Rain King. Before that it was Benjamin Nathans’s 2025 Pulitzer Prize winner To the Success of Our Hopeless Cause: The Many Lives of the Soviet Dissident Movement. This week it’s Franklin Foer’s 2004 How Soccer Explains the World: An Unlikely Theory of Globalization.

If this book looks familiar, it might be because it’s one of 10 random books from my shelf I featured in a post last month. Like I mentioned earlier, I found the book I found on the street near the university across from my old workplace. I’ve owned it for a number of years and like a so many other books in my library I’ve ignored it for far too long and needs to be read. I’m thinking 2026 is the year to finally read it.

Here’s what Amazon has to say about How Soccer Explains the World.

A groundbreaking work—named one of the five most influential sports books of the decade by Sports IllustratedHow Soccer Explains the World is a unique and brilliantly illuminating look at soccer, the world’s most popular sport, as a lens through which to view the pressing issues of our age, from the clash of civilizations to the global economy.

From Brazil to Bosnia, and Italy to Iran, this is an eye-opening chronicle of how a beautiful sport and its fanatical followers can highlight the fault lines of a society, whether it’s terrorism, poverty, anti-Semitism, or radical Islam—issues that now have an impact on all of us. Filled with blazing intelligence, colorful characters, wry humor, and an equal passion for soccer and humanity, How Soccer Explains the World is an utterly original book that makes sense of our troubled times.