Saturday, May 23, 2026

A Gentleman in Moscow -- Take 2

I really liked A Gentleman in Moscow. More on that later.

Where I want to start is its big similarity with All The Light We Cannot See, which truly didn't hit me until I looked at this blog to begin writing this post.  But as soon as I saw the cover image for All The Light, it immediately hit me that they have extremely similar protagonists. Our titular Gentleman here is Count Alexander Rostov, who has been sentenced to a life of house arrest in Moscow's glamorous Metropol Hotel.  He is intelligent, witty, and observant, but limited by his physical confines.  In All The Light, young Marie-Laure is equally intelligent and observant, but spends years confined to one home or another in war-torn France as a consequence of her blindness.
 
Each of them witness, in their own way, huge world events unfolding outside their doors while half their lives pass them by. For Count Rostov, it's the decades following the Russian Revolution, as it grows into a world power; for Marie-Laure it's World War II.
 
They each have two major and several minor relationships which anchor them through the story.  For Marie-Laure, they biggies are her father and her uncle.  For Count Rostov, they're his long-time lover and his daughter (for details, you'll have to read it).

About A Gentleman In Moscow itself, I really did enjoy it.  I listened to the audio, which helped me get through a pretty hefty book in basically record time for a slow reader.  I appreciated the Count's erudite observation and analysis of the incidents and people that swirl around him. I appreciated - and this is unusual for me - the sometimes overly flowery language and the unnecessary asides.  They just all seemed to work in this book, with this character, in this style for me.  Nevermind that outside the doors of the Metropol, Russia was in crisis; the unflappable Count Rostov carries on.

Saturday, May 16, 2026

What I'm Reading Now -- A Gentleman in Moscow

Amor Towles has been on my list of books to read for a while.  Somehow he's just never made it to the top.  I so enjoyed the experience of the last two audio books that I listened to, I decided I'd give it another go and see what else I could find in the library's "available now" category.

And there was Amor Towles! A Gentleman in Moscow was available, so I snagged it.  It's the story of a -- you guessed it -- gentleman (a count, specifically) in -- you guessed again -- Moscow after the Russian revolution.  As punishment for his various misdeeds, he is sentenced upon penalty of death to house arrest at the Metropol hotel.  It's the story of his time there -- how he passes it, whom he meets, what led him to that fate.

So far, the description in simply brilliant.  The recounting of the people and the goings-on in the lobby, the restaurants, the card room, even on the roof, all make me feel like I'm right there, wishing I were as articulate as the Count. 

I look forward to seeing what happens in the rest of his exile! 

Friday, May 15, 2026

The Paris Apartment -- Take 2

The Paris Apartment is basically the same book as The Midnight Feast.  I think, on balance, I did like The Paris Apartment a bit more.  The characters were more interesting and Paris is more interesting than most places. 

Our protagonist is the sister of a fellow who mysteriously disappeared just an hour or two before she arrived in Paris from London for a visit.  It falls to her to investigate his disappearance, all while being unsure of who she can trust and who may have been involved.

I haven't read The Guest List, the last of Lucy Foley's books that I had put on my list, but I expect it's also basically the same as the two I've read already.  Of course, maybe if I just need something entertaining, it'll be perfect. 

Sunday, May 10, 2026

Friday, May 8, 2026

All The Light We Cannot See -- Take 2

I have wanted to read All the Light We Cannot See for a long time.  It's a bit lengthy, which I think is part of the reason I never got to it.  So when it was available as an audio book and I needed a a good road trip listen recently, it was the perfect pick.  And I sure am glad I finally got to it!

It's a World War II story.  The main character is a blind girl, not yet a teenager at the start of the story, and 16 at the end.  She and her father, a locksmith employed by a major museum, fled Paris for her great uncle's home at the seaside.  What young Marie-Laure didn't know when they left is that her father was carrying one of four of the Sea of Flames, a huge and supposedly cursed diamond owned by the museum, which commissioned three replicas as the Germans closed in on Paris.  But someone knows the Sea of Flames exists, and is intent on finding it.  Marie-Laure has to navigate not only her challenges as a blind person in a new place and the normal ravages of war, but also the knowledge that her family may be in possession of the hunted gem.

It was a very quick listen (perhaps because I listened to it at 1.3x speed?), and I wonder if it was as quick of a read as well.  It did not feel like it would have equated to a 500-plus page book, that's for sure.  There were some ancillary characters whom I think the story could have been told without, but they added a certain amount of heart and balance to the tale which, in my opinion, is what made it really sing. 

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

What I'm Reading Now -- The Paris Apartment

Somehow, I find myself reading another Lucy Foley book.  This time, it's The Paris Apartment

A couple of months ago I read the forgettable The Midnight Feast, which is (shockingly, to me) Foley's seventh novel; Paris Apartment is her sixth).

To be fair, I actually do know how this happened.  I came upon it the same way I came upon All the Light We Cannot See: I was leaving for a road trip and did a quick search on my library app for audio books in the "available now" category.  I finished All the Light (and the road trip), but since I've already downloaded this one, I might as well listen to it, right?

Sunday, May 3, 2026

What I'm Reading Now -- All the Light We Cannot See

It's incredibly overdue, but I'm finally getting around to All the Light We Cannot See.  This was a huge award winner a few years ago, but I just never made the time to read it, despite it being right up my historical alley.

However, the audio is a perfect option for a solo road trip!