
Hi All. How did your week go? We’re having a very rainy Sunday here, so I plan to cuddle up on the couch and watch Canada’s game against South Africa in the World Cup. Eeeek. It’s the elimination round, so the losing team will be sent home. I’m sure I’ll be on pins and needles while watching.
Meanwhile this past week I’ve been working on organizing my bookshelves pictured here (there’s also a smaller bookcase on the opposite wall). It all started when I wanted to see how many books by Kazuo Ishiguro I had, and I found out they were in different places on my shelves, which made no sense. So I started to gather books by author, putting them together and placing them into categories.

Fiction is on the left shelves in the photo above, then in the middle shelves are books by Canadian authors (many good ones!). And lower down in the middle are adventure books of polar exploration in Antartica and the Arctic, and then books set in Africa or about Africa. On the right-hand shelves are all nonfiction books. First memoir books, then a few shelves of history and journalism books, then a shelf of rock music memoirs and biographies, before the last shelf of art books and some dog and animal books. The other wall is a bit of a mixture with more natural history, history, and some sports books.
So now I feel I’ve organized them a bit better. And here is a photo of a first edition of Isak Dinesen’s (Karen Blixen’s) book Out of Africa from 1937, which my husband gave me as a gift years ago and which sits on top of the bookcase as a beloved book. Many of the books on my shelves date back to when I worked in bookstores in the 1980s and ’90s, before I switched over to journalism. I rarely buy books anymore because the libraries here have all what I need in print or ebook formats. What about you — do you still have many print books on your shelves?

In book news this week, much is being made about the first trailer release for the upcoming new film adaptation of Jane Austen’s classic Sense and Sensibility. It’s been made for the screen many times before, most notably in the BBC miniseries in 2008, and in the 1995 film with Emma Thompson and Kate Winslet. The new film, releasing in North America on Oct. 16, appears to be a British production that stars Daisy Edgar-Jones as Elinor Dashwood and Esme Creed-Miles as sister Marianne. If you want to re-familiarize yourself with the Dashwoods and Austen’s debut novel, there’s still plenty of time to read it before it hits the big screen this fall.
And now I’ll leave you with a review of what I finished lately.
Whistler by Ann Patchett / Harper / 304 pages / 2026

4+ stars. Book 2 on my Summer List turned out to be another good and popular novel by Ann Patchett, which I read as a buddy read with Tina at the blog Turn the Page. It seemed a tighter and less scattered novel than her last one Tom Lake from 2023. But like that novel there’s a present and past timeline that weave throughout the story and give it momentum.
In the present, Daphne Fuller, age 53, and her husband Jonathan by chance run into Daphne’s one-time stepfather (age 76) in NYC’s Metropolitan Museum of Art. Daphne hasn’t seen Eddie Triplett in more than 40 years but he had once been married to her mother for a couple years when she was a kid. Back then when she was 9, Daphne and Eddie experienced a traumatic accident that tied them closer together. This episode from 1980 is explored in the past timeline, while the present timeline is consumed by the reacquaintance of Daphne with her stepfather and why his marriage long ago to her mother ended so abruptly.
I found myself pleasantly curious and invested in both the past and present storylines. Daphne seemed much like Ann Patchett herself, who also had two stepfathers, and her older husband Jonathan is a caring character. Though it’s the character of Eddie Triplett, a long-time editor at Random House, who seems to steal the show. He’s an especially genuine and endearing person … and he and Daphne have quite the warm connection (as stepfather and daughter). You won’t soon forget Eddie Triplett after this. Apparently his character was inspired by a real friend (Jim Fox) of Ann Patchett’s who worked at HarperCollins and battled cancer. She has said that the novel is not about her or Jim but is about all the love she had for him.
Both Tina and I also admired the story Eddie tells Daphne in 1980 when the situation they get caught in turns dicey. It’s about a horse named Whistler and his owner Mary Carter, who’s left for dead far out on the range. It’s a story within the story that has much to offer for Eddie and Daphne at the time. You’ll have to get the book to see what all the fuss is about with this novel, which is genuine and moving and is proving popular with a lot of readers. It seems one of Ann’s stronger novels and I liked it a bit better than Tom Lake (2023), The Dutch House (2019), and Run (2007) … with State of Wonder (2011) being another I liked. Her nonfiction is good too.
That’s all for now. What about you — have you read and liked any of Patchett’s books? Have a great week.










































