Looking Ahead

Looking Ahead – This Month’s TBR List (January 2019)

 Looking Ahead – This Month’s TBR List!

I love the start of a new reading year! I get to reset my Goodreads reading goal, sign up for reading challenges, reminisce over all the fantastic books I read the year before, and look forward to the many books I get to read in the new year.

I have been busy making some subtle changes to my blog over the past few weeks and have been pondering introducing some new content in the new year.

My NetGalley shelf has been steadily growing to lucky number 13! There are so many great titles waiting to be read and I am ready to dive into them this month. As you will see below it will be a very heavy NetGalley month as I am getting dangerously close to losing my precious 80%.

Currently Reading…  


The Lost Girls of Paris by Pam Jenoff
 (NetGalley)

Goodreads Synopsis

Grace Healey is rebuilding her life after losing her husband during the war. One morning while passing through Grand Central Terminal on her way to work, she finds an abandoned suitcase tucked beneath a bench. Unable to resist her own curiosity, Grace opens the suitcase, where she discovers a dozen photographs—each of a different woman. In a moment of impulse, Grace takes the photographs and quickly leaves the station.

Grace soon learns that the suitcase belonged to a woman named Eleanor Trigg, leader of a ring of female secret agents who were deployed out of London during the war. Twelve of these women were sent to Occupied Europe as couriers and radio operators to aid the resistance, but they never returned home, their fates a mystery. Setting out to learn the truth behind the women in the photographs, Grace finds herself drawn to a young mother turned agent named Marie, whose daring mission overseas reveals a remarkable story of friendship, valor and betrayal.

Currently Listening To…


NOS4A2 by Joe Hill
(Scribd)

Goodreads Synopsis

Victoria McQueen has a secret gift for finding things: a misplaced bracelet, a missing photograph, answers to unanswerable questions. On her Raleigh Tuff Burner bike, she makes her way to a rickety covered bridge that, within moments, takes her wherever she needs to go, whether it’s across Massachusetts or across the country.

Charles Talent Manx has a way with children. He likes to take them for rides in his 1938 Rolls-Royce Wraith with the NOS4A2 vanity plate. With his old car, he can slip right out of the everyday world, and onto the hidden roads that transport them to an astonishing – and terrifying – playground of amusements he calls “Christmasland.”

Then, one day, Vic goes looking for trouble—and finds Manx. That was a lifetime ago. Now Vic, the only kid to ever escape Manx’s unmitigated evil, is all grown up and desperate to forget. But Charlie Manx never stopped thinking about Victoria McQueen. He’s on the road again and he’s picked up a new passenger: Vic’s own son.

The Rest of the Month…


The Guy Who Died Twice (Detective D.D. Warren, #9.5) by Lisa Gardner
(NetGalley)

Goodreads Synopsis

D. D. Warren was pretty sure she’d seen it all. Then a man walks into police headquarters, attempting desperately to convince the squad that he’s dead. Explaining to him that he’s very much alive, they finally send him on his way . . . and then hours later, he turns up actually dead. And it’s on D. D. Warren to figure out how and why the dead man died . . . twice.


The Hiding Place by C.J. Tudor
(NetGalley)

Goodreads Synopsis

Joe never wanted to come back to Arnhill. After the way things ended with his old gang–the betrayal, the suicide, the murder–and after what happened when his sister went missing, the last thing he wanted to do was return to his hometown. But Joe doesn’t have a choice. Because judging by what was done to that poor Morton kid, what happened all those years ago to Joe’s sister is happening again. And only Joe knows who is really at fault.

Lying his way into a teaching job at his former high school is the easy part. Facing off with former friends who are none too happy to have him back in town–while avoiding the enemies he’s made in the years since–is tougher. But the hardest part of all will be returning to that abandoned mine where it all went wrong and his life changed forever, and finally confronting the shocking, horrifying truth about Arnhill, his sister, and himself. Because for Joe, the worst moment of his life wasn’t the day his sister went missing.

It was the day she came back.


The Beautiful Strangers by Camille Di Maio
(NetGalley)

Goodreads Synopsis

1958. Kate Morgan, tethered to her family’s failing San Francisco restaurant, is looking for an escape. She gets her chance by honoring a cryptic plea from her grandfather: find the beautiful stranger. The search takes her to Hotel del Coronado, the beachfront landmark on the Southern California coast where filming is underway on the movie Some Like It Hot.

For a movie lover like Kate, it’s a fantasy come true. So is the offer of a position at the glamorous hotel. And a new romance is making her heart beat just as fast. But as sure as she is that the Coronado is her future, Kate discovers it’s also where the ghosts of the past have come to stay. Sixty years ago a guest died tragically, and she still haunts the hotel’s halls.

As the lives of two women—generations apart—intertwine, Kate’s courageous journey could change more than she ever imagined. And with the Coronado wending its way through her soul, she must follow her dreams…wherever they may lead.


The Last Year of the War by Susan Meissner
(NetGalley)

Goodreads Synopsis

Elise Sontag is a typical Iowa fourteen-year-old in 1943–aware of the war but distanced from its reach. Then her father, a legal U.S. resident for nearly two decades, is suddenly arrested on suspicion of being a Nazi sympathizer. The family is sent to an internment camp in Texas, where, behind the armed guards and barbed wire, Elise feels stripped of everything beloved and familiar, including her own identity.

The only thing that makes the camp bearable is meeting fellow internee Mariko Inoue, a Japanese-American teen from Los Angeles, whose friendship empowers Elise to believe the life she knew before the war will again be hers. Together in the desert wilderness, Elise and Mariko hold tight the dream of being young American women with a future beyond the fences.


The Things We Cannot Say by Kelly Rimmer
(NetGalley)

Goodreads Synopsis

In 1942, Europe remains in the relentless grip of war. Just beyond the tents of the Russian refugee camp she calls home, a young woman speaks her wedding vows. It’s a decision that will alter her destiny…and it’s a lie that will remain buried until the next century.

Since she was nine years old, Alina Dziak knew she would marry her best friend, Tomasz. Now fifteen and engaged, Alina is unconcerned by reports of Nazi soldiers at the Polish border, believing her neighbors that they pose no real threat, and dreams instead of the day Tomasz returns from college in Warsaw so they can be married. But little by little, injustice by brutal injustice, the Nazi occupation takes hold, and Alina’s tiny rural village, its families, are divided by fear and hate. Then, as the fabric of their lives is slowly picked apart, Tomasz disappears. Where Alina used to measure time between visits from her beloved, now she measures the spaces between hope and despair, waiting for word from Tomasz and avoiding the attentions of the soldiers who patrol her parents’ farm. But for now, even deafening silence is preferable to grief.


Pet Sematary by Stephen King
 (Library eBook)

Goodreads Synopsis

Sometimes dead is better….When the Creeds move into a beautiful old house in rural Maine, it all seems too good to be true: physician father, beautiful wife, charming little daughter, adorable infant son — and now an idyllic home. As a family, they’ve got it all…right down to the friendly cat. But the nearby woods hide a blood-chilling truth — more terrifying than death itself…and hideously more powerful.

 

Have you read any of these titles? What are you looking forward to reading this month?
If you have a TBR list feel free to link it in the comment below!

Let’s get social…

Goodreads
Twitter
Instagram

Thank you for visiting and happy reading!

24 thoughts on “Looking Ahead – This Month’s TBR List (January 2019)

  1. These all sound good! I just added The Lost Girls of Paris after seeing it on Goodreads. Also, can’t wait to read The Things We Cannot Say. Hope you love these. ♥️

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I enjoyed Girls of Paris. I’ve seen lots of bloggers reading the Joe Hill book. I’ll also be reading Last Year of the War soon. Happy 2019 Tina ❤

    Liked by 1 person

  3. yeah, i know the feeling about the website, always looking for something to spruce it up a bit. also, i probably spent two hours yesterday setting up for the new year from Goodreads, your NGEW2019 challenge as well as the alphabet challenge and my reading challenges pages, new graphics, yada yada yada. it all takes more time than you expect. oh, the CJ Tudor books–i’ve tried twice now. no luck.

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.