Member Reviews
This book is a must read.
The strong characters Madeline, Janet and Claire felt like old friends retelling their story to me about how, what and why things happened.
It revolves around the The Printed Letter Book Shop, when you start reading it’ll become clear as to why the shopped is so called. The three women are all so different but help each other through they’re personal problems, the matriarch who brought them all together was a special lady and knew they would achieve wonderful things.This was her legacy to them. Very cleverly written.
I loved this book. I was giddy to read it as soon as I received the advanced reader copy but I forced myself to wait till I had a chance to read it in one sitting because I knew I wouldn't want to put it down. I was right!
Katherine Reay is one of my favorite authors because she writes encouraging books that are engrossing without including anything obscene or vulgar. She captures real life in her characters, making each one unique while also completely relatable. This book was fairly predictable for me- but I still wanted to read every word. I saw myself on every page; my strengths and my struggles, but also the person I want to be and can be.
This particular book felt like a love letter to bookworms. There were over two dozen references to books both classic and modern that the devout reader will catch and savor, but won't detract from the enjoyment of a less ardent reader.
I give this book four stars. I'll happily recommend it to friends and will enjoy rereading it for pleasure again in the future I know. Only it's predictability kept it from being a five star book.
I received a complimentary copy of this book from Thomas Nelson through NetGalley. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.
This story is the kind I love to read : a story about ordinary people, meeting in special circumstances which will have a great impact on their lives.
The premises were good, a young woman who inherits a lovely bookshop where two older ladies still work after the recent death of a beloved aunt - beloved but estranged since a dramatic quarrel between her and the young woman's father, the deceased own brother.
There are some mysteries: why this woman who seems to have been an angel, worshipped by all the town, has reacted so violently for money? Why one of the other women working in the shop is being violently spurned by all her family and all the town after her divorce?
There are also some predictable developments: a romance, friendships, revelations about the aforementioned mysteries.
Theoretically I could have loved this story.
But at the third I decided to stop reading.
At the third of the book the mysteries were already stretching too thin: There were hints that the divorced woman has been cheating on her husband but she's treated by absolutely everybody like she had committed infanticide! The deceased aunt is depicted as so perfect (too perfect, I was beginning to find her insufferable) that the fault was probably on the brother side. The expected friendship and romance were still keeping me waiting.
Those promised developments were still at their very beginnings, as if the author thought that waiting for them would improve the reading experience.
It didn't.
Above all, I still wasn't interested in the story, even putting aside all this grating narrative tricks. I wasn't absolutely bored, but nearly so. I hadn't connected with any of the characters and couldn't care less about their futur. I was reading half-heartedly, hoping for some sparkle, any sparkle.
To be honest it wasn't the author's fault, as she took many pains to depict all the characters, with many details that I usually crave in this kind of story. She was also very enthusiastic about books, giving various references. But all this efforts were in vain, the story remained for me tasteless, bland, flat. The characters weren't endearing, there wasn't the least tiny hint of humour and I was getting annoyed by the insistence of concealing those mysteries like the Holy Grail while fantasising upon the bookshop and Wondrous Maggy (the late aunt) (too much of a good thing is nauseating, yes, yes even bookshop, perfect old dead lady and books' lovers).
In the end it wasn't a read for me. Dull and excruciatingly lacking brillancy. Nothing like my beloved Victoria Clayton's books, alas.
A cozy setting, interesting and complex characters...all in all a sweet read that you can't help but enjoy.
Don't let the unlikability of the main character stop you from reading this wonderful book about change, sense of sekf, love, friendship and heartache. By the end I loved these women and admit I teared up a bit several times that doesn't mean it's mushy. It's not at all the strength and the fight for self awareness and the need to feel 'seen '. Beautiful scenes
Thank you to netgalley and the publisher for allowing me this arc for an honest review
A book about books or bookstores is most always a can't miss for me. I was definitely intrigued by the premise of this one. Madeline is a successful lawyer in a top firm in Chicago, working 70+ hour weeks to make partner. About the same time she find out she didn't make partner, she discovers she has inherited a bookstore in the suburbs from her once beloved, long estranged aunt. She also inherits Claire and Janet, the ladies (and dear friends) who work in her Aunt Maddie's bookstore. While Madeline struggles to understand the business of the bookstore and establish some sort of relationship with Claire, Janet and the rest of the community, she becomes aware of some truths she had long been avoiding.
It was interesting to see how all three ladies grow and change and step into a life they chose, not one they settled upon. I loved that Maddie left a reading list to each of the ladies and how the reading choices affected their choices.
I received a complimentary copy of this book from Thomas Nelson through NetGalley. Opinons expressed in this review are completely my own.
The Printed Letter Bookshop was a delightful read that I cannot wait to recommend to women everywhere! Madeline Carter is shocked when her life takes a complete deviation from her perfect plans. First her career as an attorney is jeopardized when she doesn’t make partner and suddenly she is the new owner of her somewhat estranged Aunt’s home and bookshop. Madeline quickly learns that the bookshop is in financial distress, not that different from her own finances. Determined to bring the shop out of the red so that she can sell it, Madeline finds herself in a new career filled with authors, readers and co-workers.
The circle of women in this novel are a fantastic cast of complex characters. There is heart, wit, compassion, knowledge and love deep in each of them. Together they remind us that life needs friendship and women need to be able to lean on each other. Furthermore, Madeline, Claire and Janet are all proof that even with husbands, jobs and children, relationships with other women feed the soul.
Centered on a bookshop, any reader will be quickly captivated by the cozy nature of this store. I found myself wishing I could step through the doors. Rooting for Madeline’s heart and complex life to find its true course, I was quickly engaged and enjoyed this book throughout. A perfect read for a day at the beach or curled up on the couch, The Printed Letter Bookshop is a hit.
A big thanks to NetGallery and the publisher for an advanced reader copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.
Madeline's life is turned upside down when she unexpectedly inherits a small town bookstore after the death of a family member. Over time, as she prepares the store for sale, she gets to know the two women who work there and looks at her own stressful, high-power lawyer life with a new perspective.
This story is split between Madeline, Claire, and Janet, the three women now in charge of keeping the bookstore afloat. I thoroughly enjoyed getting to know each of them and watching them grow as they dealt with the issues in their own lives. This novel is full of hope and forgiveness and just the perfect amount of faith.
There's also the fascinating behind the scenes peek at what it's like to run a bookshop. Those glimpses into the trials and triumphs of owning a small business were some of my favorite parts of the book.
There are few things I love as much as books celebrating the amazingness of book shops. That's what's made 84, Charing Cross Road into one of my favourite books ever, and it's what made The Little Shop of Happily Ever After into one of my favourite reads of 2018. So when I read the premises for The Printed Letter Bookshop? Well I knew I had to read it. Suffice it to say: I was not disappointed.
The Story
One of Madeline Cullen's happiest childhood memories is of working with her Aunt Maddie in the quaint and cozy Printed Letter Bookshop. But by the time Madeline inherits the shop nearly twenty years later, family troubles and her own bitter losses have hardened her heart toward her once-treasured aunt--and the now struggling bookshop left in her care.
While Madeline intends to sell the shop as quickly as possible, the Printed Letter's two employees have other ideas. Reeling from a recent divorce, Janet finds sanctuary within the books and within the decadent window displays she creates. Claire, though quieter than the acerbic Janet, feels equally drawn to the daily rhythms of the shop and its loyal clientele, finding a renewed purpose within its walls.
When Madeline's professional life takes an unexpected turn, she questions her plans and her heart. She begins to envision a new path for herself and her aunt's beloved shop--provided the women's best combined efforts are not too little, too late.
The opinion
More so than about romance, this book is about growth and the way books can guide you through this. Madeline, Janet and Claire are all vastly different. From their careers to their interests to their personal lives, however, they all find themselves at cross roads. Before she died, Maddie left Madeline, Janet and Claire a list of books to read. As the story starts, they each see their lives fall apart in some way or form. But the books Maddie listed for them, offer support, guidance and inspiration to each of the three women.
Throughout the story of The Printed Letter Bookshop, what struck me again and again is to what extent each of the main characters was allowed their own path and growth. And, something which not many authors manage to get right: the characters weren't forced to like each other. There were no over-emotional moments, no forced recognition of "shared interests"...
Katherine Reay was a revelation in not only the respect she offers her characters, but also in the love for books that just about jumps from the pages. Whatever book is recommended, referenced or talked about: I immediately wanted to go add it to my TBR. (Sure, this might also be a personal deficiency, as I am that way about most any book title I come across, but still).
The rating: 5/5
This was my first read of 2019, and I honestly can't imagine a better book to start of the year. The writing was beautiful, the characters well-developed, the love for books clear as day... If you love books, small villages, or immense personal growth for women through various kinds of hardships? Then this is 100% the book for you!
-Saar
Thanks to #netgalley for the ARC in exchange for a fair review. This book was a heartwarming delight and a change from my usual thriller/darker reading choices. If you love books/bookshops/people focused feel good books this is definitely one to add to your TBR. I loved getting to know these 3 ladies, what made them tick and how a wise old Aunt uses her love of books to bring her estranged niece right back to where she needs to be in her life. #netgalley #theprintedletterbookshop #katherinereay #heartwarming #booklovestory #litsy #goodreads #tea_sipping_bookworm #amazonreviews #bookstagram
Okay, so this is about three women and a bookshop...how much better does it get? Oh, did I say troubled bookshop and troubled ladies? Yep. This is a slow unfolding of everything that’s going on, and plenty of small-town intrigue going on as well. Broken relationships, troubled kids, and so on. Can working together around the books, trying to save the bookstore, do anything to turn these women’s lives around?
This one’s more of a literary fiction than her previous ones have been, and the faith message is very subtle, but present: true peace is only found in God, not in an affair or in a bottle of wine. General market readers would probably hardly even notice it.
I will say a word of caution about the books quoted. Unlike <i>Dear Mr. Knightley</i>, which was the reason I discovered a few more clean authors (notably Anne Perry’s mysteries), this book is about a bookstore and there are many, many books mentioned and/or discussed. Some are clean and some aren’t (Lolita, etc). So for the younger readers out there, I’d advise checking any reading list with an adult or a more mature friend before making out a want-to-read list.
Content: drinking, books mentioned in passing that have content in them
Thanks to the publisher and netgalley for a free ebook. A positive review was not required.
The Printed Letter Bookshop is a well written tale of friends. I really enjoyed this book and highly recommend it. I received an arc from Netgalley and this is my unbiased review.
I enjoy Katherine Reay’s books and always look forward to reading her newest story. This one did not disappoint me. The setting of the bookstore is perfect—-you have to love a bookstore that’s a hub of a small town! But it’s the characters that drive this storyline and give this book its heart.
The book opens with the funeral service of Maddie, the much-cherished owner of the bookstore. Although we don’t actually meet Maddie in this book, we get to know her by the positive impact she left on the lives of those who loved her. Maddie unexpectedly leaves the bookstore to her niece, Madeline, a big-city attorney with plans for the future that do not include running a bookstore. Madeline loved her aunt, but has every intention of selling the bookstore. And that’s where this heart-touching story really begins.
We view this story through the eyes of three women: Madeline, Claire, and Janet. Each one has a struggle or problem to solve in her life. As the three work together in the bookstore, strong friendships are developed. As Maddie’s influence lives on through them, broken hearts are healed and new hope is given.
This is the type of Christian fiction I love best: An inspirational , well-written story about real-life situations combined with the themes of faith, hope, and love. Give this book a try. I think you’ll love it, too.
I received a copy of this book from the publisher. All opinions are my own.
Great cover, great book. A good book for any book lover.
Thanks to both NetGalley and Thomas Nelson Publishing for my eARC of this book in exchange for my honest unbiased review
The cover and description is the first thing that drew me to this book. It sounds like my kind of bookstore! I enjoyed the characters and how they all grew. I loved the story!!
This kind of writing lets you see everything in both the settings and the characters, and this bookshop is adorable. Reay was clever in giving us three characters to follow, as getting their perspective is important at times in how the story plays out and how the bookshop tackles its problems.
Three women with different issues and ways of dealing with life. Three women determined to keep the bookshop not just afloat but thriving. Three women who have to not only talk to each other and strategize together, but who can't really do a great job until they find peace within themselves first.
Yes, there's a handsome hunk of burning love in the picture too, but he isn't the center of this lovely story of courage and the ability to find your compass and start traveling to your own true north.
The description of the bookstore was absolutely perfect, as someone who loves books and readings I found the author was spot on. I liked the interwoven stories as well as all the books mentioned in it. It's overall a very positive story and I enjoyed reading it.
The Printed Letter Bookshop is a fascinating book written by Katherine Reay(The Jane Austen Escape) about a funeral of an eccentric character, a legacy and a bookshop.
It is not uncommon that when bookshop owners are close to the end they need to find someone who, in love for books won't decide of selling, changing activity once they die. Books are a story of love and if people don't understand it, it can be the end.
Surely the eccentric, called also "crazy" - by Madeline s dad- aunt of Madeline, Maddie, must have thought this, when, close to the end decides of leaving all her possessions, bookshop included at her niece Madeline.
Madeline is not exactly in this business created romantically decades before by Maddie and Pete, her beloved husband.
The name of the bookshop appears singular but there is an explanation. This lady created a lot of joy in people thanks to the fact that she shared with people a lot of books. It meant that these people became readers and most of them did not forget Maddie, and so with the time she received a lot of thank-you letters.
If Maddie wouldn't have been around maybe people wouldn't never started to read. So, when they created the bookshop, to Maddie important to call it shop, and not store for giving an idea of more simplicity and warm, the letters needed to be included.
All of them; close to them notes of Ernest Hemingway and Francis Scott Fitzgerald.
Claire and Janet, very well defined characters are the historical shopgirls and one of them took also great care of the latest moments of Maddie; a bookshop is a place where friendship are cemented and people in general are not just customers.
They love to spend time with shop girls and the bookshop s owner ; and they are helped by them; sometimes shopgirls, these ones mature, were ladies (one in particular) who at first searched this place because in grade of presenting warm and security. Shopgirls are the soul of a bookshop: they suggest titles, help readers in search of something new and exciting or the best classics for the season.
The arrival of Madeline - and not only - will create some frictions at first, because her new idea of launching a big sell during the Christmas Time and when in general people tend to read less for restoring the not florid economical situation of the bookshop left by auntie Maddie for later selling the bookshop in Spring, without to count the entrance of social medias will be a change.
But after all, with a lot of intricate, funny, romantic situations, who knows if Madeline, who in the while discovers, living in the house of auntie Maddie a lot of affinities with her beloved relative, will sell the bookshop?
Tender story, pretty crowded, with a lot of book suggestions for every possibile tastes, if you love books, every chapter is narrated in first person. Janet, Madeline, Claire...Beauty.
I thank NetGalley for this ebook.
This was a novel about books, families and relationships. Madeline inherits her Aunt’s house and bookshop. For many years Madeline was too busy working as a lawyer to take time to visit her Aunt but after inheriting the Printed Letter Bookshop, Madeline gives up her life as a lawyer and gets to know the two women working in the bookshop. Gradually Madeline starts to
This story is told from the point of view of Madeline, Clare and Janet and how their lives revolve around books, reading and their desire to follow their dreams.
I received a complimentary copy of this book from Thomas Nelson through NetGalley. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.
THE PRINTED LETTER BOOKSHOP by KATHERINE REAY appealed to me especially, as I am a book lover and like the idea of a book store that is an important part of the community. In fact I cannot understand anyone who doesn't enjoy reading!
It is a most enjoyable read, with the emphasis on friendship, belonging and forgiveness.
When Madeline inherits the Printed Letter Bookshop from her aunt Maddie she also inherits her friends and a lifestyle that is very different from that of a big city lawyer. The two women who run the shop with her are Janet, a divorced artist, and Claire, who is married with two children.
All three of these women have been heavily impacted by Maddie, and, as they read through the book lists she has chosen for each one, their lives are changed for the better.
It is a cleverly written book with quite a bit of depth. I can recommend it to anyone who loves reading.
I was given a free copy of the book by NetGalley from Thomas Nelson. The opinions in this review are completely my own.