Ang’s January/February ’25 Reads and QOTMs

My last book review post was 4 years ago. Yowza! Guess I fell off that bandwagon.

Well, no time like the present to try to jump back on. Here are the books I started and finished in January and February! (I’ll link them all to my Amazon storefront in the event that you’re looking for a good read.)

All My Secrets by Lynn Austin was gifted to me for Christmas! This Christian fiction book was great. I haven’t read many stories set in America’s Gilded Age, so the setting was fresh for me. It was quite the journey following the high-society Stanhope family as they navigate a terrible loss. Junietta, Sylvia, and Addison are three women facing an uncertain future after the death of Sylvia’s husband, Art (Junietta’s son). Sometimes, books that follow multiple storylines annoy me, but the author seamlessly jumps through time as both Sylvia and Junietta shared their memories with Addy. I blew through this book in less than 7 days.


Not sure if I can call it already, but One Must Tell the Bees might be my favorite book of 2025. I absolutely loved this read, but I don’t know that many of my book-loving friends will share my sentiment. This story is for a very specific niche: lovers of both Sherlock Holmes adventures and Abraham Lincoln history. I am often skeptical of “fan fiction,” but J. Lawrence Matthews does a beautiful job staying true to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s depiction of Holmes and Watson, all while masterfully weaving in the historical happenings surrounding the assassination of our 16th President. Some have critiqued the length of the book (it’s a whopping 566 pages), but it’s really 3 stories in one. I’m here for it!


I finished Aftermath on a weekend trip to visit Scott’s grandma. While not a blockbuster, I enjoyed this quick read. I know this genre can often bring with it eye rolls or comments of “How can you read something so ‘cheesy’?” While it’s true that sections of Christian fiction books can seem “forced”, I love hearing how these stories are borne out of specific circumstances within an author’s life. Terri’s Author Note at the end was impactful for me. How I long for our country and our culture to quit zeroing in on the divisive and to focus on God-honoring values and truth. May the “roaring lion” that is seeking to devour be stopped by those who are safely clothed in the armor that God provides. May light overcome the darkness. (I’ll now be stepping off my soapbox since that paragrah did nothing to help review the book. Heh.)


The Mona Lisa Vanishes is a true story about the theft of one of the most famous paintings in the world. Nicholas Day wrote it with a middle school audience in mind. I read it by myself, but I think I would have enjoyed it more as a read-aloud with my kids. Either way, I learned new things about a time/place in history I’ve not read much about. Three-and-a-half stars – for now.


A few impactful quotes from these books:

...if we remember that death comes to all of us, we'll pay better attention to how we live.1

The Almighty has a way of bringing good things from our sorrows, if we let Him.1

Beware what you read, Watson. Too often a writer seeks to satisfy his readers—not challenge them.2

In a conspiracy theory, belief matters more than facts. Belief in a conspiracy inevitably leads you away from the facts.4

1 All My Secrets, Lynn Austin
2 One Must Tell the Bees, J. Lawrence Matthews
3 Aftermath, Terri Blackstock
4 The Mona Lisa Vanishes, Nicholas Day

Ang’s April ’20 Reads and QOTMs

Zipped through some fiction books this month and made progress on a few of my non-fiction reads.

One of my favorite librarians left me Things I Never Told You on her last visit to the DR. I enjoyed reading about these three sisters who work through their broken relationships and try to process their fourth sister’s death. (From a writing standpoint, I’m still not sure how I feel about the switching between first and third person, but it didn’t bother me enough to quit reading.) Not a 5-star read, but I liked it enough to purchase the second of the Thatcher Sisters trilogy for a couple bucks on my Kindle.

Moments We Forget, book #2 in the aforementioned series by Beth Vogt, continues the story of the Thatcher sisters, focusing on Jillian and her battle with cancer. I liked “getting to know” the three girls better. It was cool watching another sister become interested in developing a relationship with the Lord.

More than a Carpenter is a classic read that I’m not sure I’ve ever picked up before. This new edition was co-written by Josh and Sean McDowell; the study questions were well-thought through. This is a great read for new believers or anyone curious about Christianity.

Candle in the Darkness by Lynn Austin was my favorite read this month! I downloaded this piece of historical fiction awhile back, and it’s been sitting dormant on my Kindle for several years. I accidentally opened it a couple weeks ago and thought, “Why not give it a try?” Ended up loving it. The characters were fantastic, Caroline’s slave Eli being a favorite. (I was reading this simultaneously with Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, a non-fiction book about the same time period but focused on events out West. Neat to see Lincoln mentioned in both. I was able to make some more big-picture connections in American history.) I know life doesn’t always bring the happy ending for everyone, but it felt good to see things resolve after so much conflict/loss.


I tried awful hard to pare down my favorite thoughts/quotes from this month, but I wasn’t very successful. Skip them if you must.

How did forgiveness work? The divine interacting with the less-than of mankind. How did the supposed goodness of God not get overpowered by the world’s darkness?1

Mark Twain said this--'I've had a lot of worries in my life, most of which never happened.'2

But maybe...maybe faith wasn't so much about believing enough. Being enough. Maybe faith was realizing the truth of who God was, and what He promised, was enough for all her doubts.2

Forgiveness always has a price.3

As G.K. Chesteron says, 'The purpose of opening the mind, as of opening the mouth, is to close it again on something solid.'3

Christianity is not a religion; it's not a system; it's not an ethical idea; it's not a psychological phenomenon. It's a person. If you trust Christ, start watching your attitudes and actions because Jesus Christ is in the business of changing lives.3

'He put us where we are for time being and give us a job to do. And even if I can't see a reason why, I gonna do this job for Jesus. I gonna love white folks, whether they love me back or not, 'cause that's what Jesus tell me to do.'4

'Seem like a mighty hard thing to change someone's mind,' he said. 'Most folks won't change their mind unless they have a change of heart first.'4

'Some of these men never once thought about Jesus their whole life,' he said. 'But they crying out to Him now cause they hurt and afraid. Jesus wants to answer them. He wants to help that poor dying boy out there, but the only arms and the only voice He has is ours.'4

'Can't never go by your feelings. Got to go by the word of the Lord.'4

'I won my freedom long before the Yankees came,' Josiah said quietly. 'I was free the moment I picked you up and decided to forgive Missy Caroline and her daddy. You can start living as a free man, too, once you forgive...."4

Each one hopes that if he feeds the crocodile enough, the crocodile will eat him last. All of them hope that the storm will pass before their turn comes to be devoured. But I fear - I fear greatly - the storm will not pass... There is no chance of a speedy end except through united action.5

You ask, what is our aim? I can answer in one word: it is victory, victory at all costs, victory in spite of all terror, victory, however long and hard the road may be; for without victory, there is no survival.5

There are vast numbers not only in this island but in every land, who will render faithful service in this War, but whose names will never be known, whose deeds will never be recorded. This is a War of the Unknown Warriors...5

Never in the field of human conflict has so much been owed by so many to so few.5

Be of good cheer. The hour of your deliverance will come. The soul of freedom is deathless; it cannot, and will not, perish.5

Goodnight then: sleep to gather strength for the morning. For the morning will come.5

'There are bad white men and bad Indians,' [Black Kettle] said. 'The bad men on both sides brought about this trouble.'6

If you see yourself or your fellow students as candles, you'll want to make your campus a wind-free zone.7

A culture that allows the concept of 'safety' to creep so far that it equates emotional discomfort with physical danger is a culture that encourages people to systematically protect one another from the very experiences embedded in daily life that they need in order to become strong and healthy.7


1Things I Never Told You, Beth K. Vogt
2Moments We Forget, Beth K. Vogt
3More Than a Carpenter, Josh and Sean McDowell
4Candle in the Darkness, Lynn Austin
5Churchill: The Power of Words, edited by Martin Gilbert
6Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, Dee Brown
7The Coddling of the American Mind, Greg Lukianoff and Jonathan Haidt