I did not write reviews of my twenty plus post-apocalyptic and zombie genre reads in the same time span, although Margaret Atwood's MaddAdam trilogy, Ernest Cline's Ready Player One, and M. R. Carey's The Girl with All the Gifts were excellent.
Locally Laid: How We Built a Plucky, Industry-changing Egg Farm - from Scratch… by Lucie B. Amundsen

I recommend this book highly, but admit to a little bias: I grew up amid massive corporate chicken production and am fascinated with the more romantic and humane notions of what farming, chicken life and egg production entail. My multiple chicken coffee table books, and yearning for an egg laying flock in my own yard are evidence of my chicken fascination, but this book should be interesting to a wide audience, especially those interested in the locavore movement and business start up realities.
I'll be looking for Lola eggs on my grocery shelves, and watching for more books by this author.
Very exciting and well written techno-page turner spanning multiple continents and cultures. Intricate plot. Great character writing, especially the females. Reminded me of reading Clancy, Grisham, Larsson, only as thick as three of them, and more complex. Or like binge-watching a season of Homeland. I couldn't stop reading this book, my first by Neal Stephenson. It won't be my last. I checked to see who optioned the movie rights, but it looks bound to be a series on Fox TV. I'll watch it. I already miss this book.

From the forward by Abraham Verghese to the Epilogue by Lucy Kalanithi, and all the wisdom and excellent writing of Paul Kalanithi in-between, this book is a revelation. I was a humbled to learn about the author's life, his brilliant mind, his bravery and his legacy. Reading his memoir was an honor. I wish he had been given more time because he was taken too soon, and he had so much to say.
Life is a Verb. Tuesdays with Morrie. The Art of Losing. Aging as a Spiritual Practice. And now, When Breath Becomes Air - These are some of the most meaningful and beautiful books about life and death I'ver read yet.
My highest recommendation.


I read a lot of post-apocalyptic lit, and this is scarier than any zombie virus book, and even more chilling since this is practically expected to happen and there no plans to prevent an attack or address the power disruption that would ensue. In short, we are not prepared. Or we are preparing for the wrong things.
A great deal of the latter half of the book details the vigilant emergency preparedness and planning done by the Mormons, and the lack of our preparedness at the state or federal levels. I was interested enough to do further research and to think much more carefully about my emergency stores and my ability to handle any natural or man made disaster, particularly where water and power are concerned.
I am glad to see the book and the author getting a lot of press, and hope that our communities and governments are paying attention and taking action. I recommend this book highly. It is thought provoking and sobering.






I'm feeling very conflicted about this book. The writing was original, the main character unique, fascinating and heartbreaking. The story was frustrating at times, the supporting characters fell a little flat for me, and the ending left me very unfulfilled. I would have preferred an ending I didn't have to supply on my own. However, the writing was so good, and there were so many things to think about, seeing the modern world through a refugee's eyes, and trying to understand how Little Bee managed to survive and compartmentalize, and I would recommend this to friends, particularly my book group. I think they will be very divided on this one.


The story is told from a variety of perspectives, including letters, and I couldn't help but be reminded a bit of reading 84 Charring Cross Road, and how this heartbreaking, yet funny and surprising story was reminiscent of John Irving or Kurt Vonnegut for me. But Amy Bloom is unique and every time I read her novels, I remind myself that she is a poet, and can paint vivid pictures with a minimum of words.
As always, I wished the story were longer, I wanted to know more about everything and everyone. But the author left me with a beautiful description of a snapshot that lets me fill in most of the blanks with my imagination. I've gone back to reread the last chapter several times and I can almost picture the scene and I know that the more of this story and these characters is simply love and family, in all its permutations.
I highly recommend this book, for Amy Bloom fans and for those unfamiliar with her work. It is a book that will resonate for a very long time.
Beautifully written memoir.
A surprisingly engaging read filled with tragic and fascinating characters. A little lecture-like at the end, but a fast paced and riveting story I could not put down, filled with memorable social commentary and a loving tribute to friendship, and to the beauty and resilience of great art and the human spirit.
