
This week I read nine books!!!!
15. Into a Golden Era (Timeless #7). Gabrielle Meyer. 2026. 384 pages. [Source: Library] [christian fiction, christian romance, series book, 3 stars]
43. Board book: Let's Count to Ten: Animals. Priddy Books. 16 pages. [Source: Library] [4 stars, counting book]
45. Plankton is Pushy. Jonathan Fenske. 2017. Scholastic. 40 pages. [Source: Review copy][4 stars]
46. Peek-a-Clue: Animals at Home. Gideon Sterer. Illustrated by Marcos Farina. 2026. 38 pages. [Source: Library] [4 stars, board books]
47. Peek-a-Clue: Safari Animals (An Animal Guessing Game) Gideon Sterer. Illustrated by Marcos Farina. 2026. 38 pages. [Source: Library] [4 stars, board books]
48. Candy Corn Christmas. Jonathan Fenske. 2025. 40 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, Christmas, Halloween]
49. A Unicorn, A Dinosaur, and a Shark Walk into a Book. Jonathan Fenske. 2023. 32 pages. [Source: Library] [picture books, animal fantasy, meta fiction]
Century of Viewing #25
1950s
- 1952. Limelight. FANTASTIC movie. Horrible movie poster. Charlie Chaplin is WONDERFUL in this movie. Anyway, basic premise: an aging, out-of-work clown saves the life of a depressed young woman, a ballerina. As he nurses her back to health, they grow closer and closer. They both make good attempts to fight for happiness and new beginnings. But when he fears he's standing in her way of making a great success, he steps down and gives into his weakness--alcohol. But she never stops believing in him....and his comeback. This one also features Buster Keaton in the last twenty or twenty-five minutes. ABSOLUTELY HAUNTING melody. I loved this one so much!!!!
- 1954. The Caine Mutiny. Despite the lack of Michael Caine (hee hee) this drama has DRAMA and then some. Set during World War II. It was EXTREMELY intense in places. When a captain fails to make decisions that could save the ship and men, several men step forward to take command....and will be put on trial for it.
- 1959. The Bat. This one wasn't for me. Or at least it wasn't for me last night when I watched it. A mystery writer rents a big house...the neighborhood is being terrorized by "the Bat" and other things are just a bit off. But she'll use her skills as a writer to help solve the mystery....or will she???? To me it wasn't so much about her being super smart as it was her just happening to rent the house where a treasure has been hid AND witnessing a few things. And the person she thinks is "the Bat" isn't the Bat??? So again, it wasn't her being brilliant and deducing everything (were there clues for the audience to follow????) so much as the ending just happening.
- 1960. 13 Ghosts. Is it scary? No, not really. Only "scary" in a spooky, perhaps campy way. A man inherits a mansion haunted by 13 ghosts. His uncle was a ghost-hunter who collected ghosts and entrapped them. A family--dad, mom, sister, brother--is in danger though all may not realize it. The kid brother, for example, is ALL in for the thrills and chills and excitement. I enjoyed this one well enough.
- 1960. 12 to the Moon. It was a thing I watched. Twelve travel to the moon and back with more misadventures than they'd prefer. Ten men, two women. Many, many, many, many, many nations represented. A few animals as well. This one has plenty of mishaps in the plot yet rarely is truly entertaining. My favorite bits being how the hostile alien race living beneath the surface of the moon WANTED the cats to stay and the humans to go far, far, far away. It does have a couple of messages embedded in it.
- 1996. Twister. It has been thirty years, I think, give or take a few months. I'm sure this was a Blockbuster rental on VHS. It was INTENSE but good. I felt bad for Melissa who accidentally had to do the storm chasing and experience all the trauma of having so many close calls. No wonder she was relieved to let him go!!!! This one had a LARGE cast of characters that felt right. And more than a few memorable scenes.
- 2026. Seeking Persephone. Four episode mini-series, period drama. I hadn't really held out any hope of watching this one, but I saw it streaming free on Roku (don't know how long it will be free) and knew I needed to make time for it. Based on Sarah M. Eden's book, I wanted to love, love, love, love it. And I do love the idea of it!!!!! And the fact that a book by an author I've enjoyed in the past has had a book adapted!!!! A CLEAN period drama at that. This could potentially open up doors for others to be made in the future perhaps. I hope. I love the setting. I love the costumes. I love the trope of marriage of convenience. I should have loved the "Beauty and the Beast" or Persephone and Hades connection, but, honestly that was my least favorite bit. BUT I do love quite a few things about this one. I just found the whole "terrified of wolves" and "chased by a wolf pack" thing a bit odd. I mean the whole success of their marriage almost leans on this fear of wolves.
© 2026 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews
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