Tag Archives: @2025 Book Chatter

Sunday Matters: Day by Day

Sunday Matters, a latte on a wooden tray against greenery.

How y’all doing? The news cycle is crazy. Stuff happening every minute. I highly recommend hitting a bookstore, preferably an indie store, and buying some books to improve the mood. Hey, the library works too. I avoid the news, never watch it, but a lot of my work is on social media so it’s impossible to ignore. But books? Books bring me back every time. We just have to take it day by day.

Right Now:

Church stuff and then later my MRI. Praying that the two remaining tumors are either totally gone or remained the same size. Also praying that the big sucker they took out last year is not coming back. It was attached to my skull and that portion of my skull was completely removed so hopefully it’s good.

This Week:

I don’t have any special commitments this week so the week is looking really good.

I do plan to either download one of those indoor walk fit apps. If you have a good one, let me know. Or, I will just throw the shoes on and head out with an audiobook. I’ve gained at least ten pounds since my surgery last year. Originally, I lost 27 lbs but I gained 10 lbs over this past month so I feel kind of puffy. Ick-ish. Need to get out and move. I was using the lack of my pup being able to go with me as an excuse but it’s time to do something.

Reading:

My book club discussion for Trust went pretty well. Plenty to discuss. My review is here, in case you missed it.

My review for Butter should be up soon. I really enjoyed it but it’s NOT a good book to read when you are gaining weight. Haha. A lot of food talk, I made the butter / soy sauce rice three times while reading it.

My review of Animal Farm is on its way as well. It was a re-read and there isn’t much new to say but heck, I will review it anyway.

So what am I reading now?

Watching:

Nothing. Absolutely nothing. Reading is okay but I can’t seem to focus on TV at all.

Grateful for:

  • Even though I basically got tossed out of my in-law’s house for trying to help last weekend, I am grateful for the break. If they really need us, we will of course help but they are going to have to ask.
  • Fun gatherings. I alway roll my eyes a bit when I either host a gathering or get invited to one, but nearly every time I enjoy the heck out of it. I am quite the extrovert but at the end of the week I am just tired. Whew.
  • Spring-like weather. I can tell it is going to be an unbearable summer already. I mean, it’s February and it’s been hovering around 80 degrees. It is nice though right now.

That’s all I have. I will post an update on my MRI results when I have them. Have a fantastic week!

Review: Trust

Trust

Trust
By Hernan Diaz
Published Riverhead, 9780593420324, May 2023, 416 pp.

The Short of It:

What happens when money can’t buy the perfect life?

The Rest of It:

Trust is a novel made up of four competing narratives:

  • The book opens with BONDS,  a novel by Harold Vanner. The story of Wall Street financier Benjamin Rask and his wife, Helen. Rich beyond means, but dealing with Helen’s declining health and her descent into madness.
  • MY LIFE, a memoir by Andrew Bevel. This is Bevel’s attempt to correct the horrible fictionalization of his life in BONDS. It’s never completed and fails to hit the mark.
  • IDA’S MEMOIR, is the memoir that results from Ida’s story. Ida is the ghostwriter hired by Bevel to help him pen his memoir.
  • MILDRED’S JOURNAL is comprised of her personal papers detailing her life with Andrew and ultimately, what we know of her final days.

This was a fascinating read. The transitions between each story was a little jarring at first, until you get the hang of what is happening. I read this on my Kindle and at first, I thought my ebook copy was possibly corrupted but then it all began to make sense.

I have to say, I was pretty enthralled with Benjamin and Helen Rask. They lived quite the life of affluence. Parties, concerts, social circles and Helen’s philanthropy. I was very invested in their story, especially when Helen falls ill and descends into possible madness. BUT, this is the fictionalized story that Vanner absolutely hated!! So much so that he purchased the publishing house that put the book out and bought every copy to get it off the shelves. BONDS has dashes of GATSBY, in my opinion.

Bevel is quite the oddity. Somewhat brilliant as a financier but without possessing any tangible talent. Financial matters just seem to go his way. His desire to correct Vanner’s work leads him to hire a ghostwriter, Ida. This part of the story is really interesting. The hiring process gives us a window into Bevel’s life and Ida’s own memoir highlighting the experience gives us her unfettered opinion of Bevel himself.

The author gives us all of these female characters in various stages of realization and dare I say it, enlightenment. Historically, women didn’t play a large role in the world of finance, or did they? As the reader, you are tasked with putting all these stories together to find the real truth.

Was Bevel as devoted to his wife Mildred as he wants us to believe? Was Mildred really “too far gone” in her descent into illness or was she well aware of the goings on around her? Mental illness or some other ailment? Once you get to her journal, it’s not clear because it is after all HER point of view and she clearly writes from a medicated haze of awareness.

Who can you believe? What story is real?

I picked this for my club’s February read and I am really glad I did. It was pretty readable even with the different formats, but more than that, I was intrigued. I wanted to know more about these people and the search for truth, a somewhat elusive thing, was entertaining. I liked how the author didn’t really lead the reader by the hand, he sort of puts it all out there for you to interpret. I liked that the story could be considered from many different angles.

Trust won the Pulitzer for fiction, was longlisted for the Booker Prize in 2022 and made Obama’s list of fave reads for 2022. I really enjoyed Diaz’s writing and can’t wait for his next work. Trust is also being adapted into a series for HBO by Kate Winslet.

Highly recommend.

Source: Borrowed
Disclosure: This post contains Bookshop.org affiliate links.