Mel, very interesting re:
The Emperor's Soul - I was under the impression the connecting novel WAS out.

(I also liked the text version of the graphic novel better.)
It was fun to hear of your Janette Oke binge, though you read the wrong end of the Love Comes Softly series (I think I read the last 3 once and...really disliked them).

I immediately went to look up the Prairie Legacy series because I had no recollection of them...I still have pretty much no recollection of them; they look vaguely familiar but I have no idea if I ever read them or not.

But I do remember
A Woman Named Damaris being a favourite.

SA, glad you enjoyed
The Last of the Lost Boys.

I still haven't read
The Door Before - I'm not really keen on the idea of
tying the Cupboards world with Ashtown. ...plus, if there was a sequel, I wanted one on Dotty and Frank.

Also, what were your thoughts on
The Woman Who Smashed Codes? I read it recently too (thoughts below) - please thank Scarlet for the recommendation.
I think I've read
Murder on the Orient Express...but I don't recall for sure.

I also saw the movie recently (the 2017 one), so I imagine I will try to find the book soon to be sure one way or the other.
Jo, your reading list always looks fascinating.

You'll have to let me know what you think of
The Radium Girls!
AJ, your book list always looks way too interesting too.

I may have to look up
Glencoe and the Indians as the Scottish-Indian connection is one I've been rather curious about.
Dot, after the last two Attolian books, I've had a very mild opinion of the new book news - but watching the reactions has been hilarious.

Is the fifth Penderwicks the last one? I read the first couple but haven't kept up after that.

fk, I was sure Jo would suggest this one, but she didn't, so.

You might consider looking into
The Christmas Day Kitten by James Herriot. And that's the only suggestion off the top of my head - we never really did seasonal books.
I finished
Sad Cypress a while back - it was fine, but not a favorite Agatha Christie.
I have also recently read:
American Grit: A Woman's Letters from the Ohio Frontier by Anna Briggs Bentley, ed. by Emily Foster. I picked this one up at a whim and, while it had its interesting parts, it wasn't that impressive. On one hand, it was a good reminder that human nature hasn't changed. On the other, there was a lot of complaining about not receiving letters and begging for her family to write because surely they weren't that busy.
The Dressmaker of Khair Khana by Gail Tzemach Lemmon. This one I also picked up on a whim but it was much more rewarding. The book was about a Kabul teenager and her family learning to survive under the Taliban's rule (late 1990s, I believe). As her father and brothers disappear to avoid being imprisoned or drafted, Kamila Sidiqi turns to dressmaking to support her family - and becomes an entrepreneur.
The Circular Staircase by Mary Roberts Rhinehart. This was the author's first work, and I suppose it showed; it alternated between being pretty humourous and being clunky, cliched, and frustrating.
Women's Diaries of the Western Journey by Lillian Schlisser. I enjoyed the look at accounts of journeys on the western trails, though they were often discouraging and/or sad - and I didn't agree with all the commentary the editor had in putting them together.
Country Life in Tent & Field by Mrs. Orsemus [Frances] B. Boyd. This was a memoir about the author's life with her Calvary husband during the late 1800s. Although she has some of the racial/cultural bias of her time, she's skirts around a lot of the worst of it - and she's a pretty humourous storyteller.
American Nightingale: The Story of Frances Slanger, Forgotten Heroine of Normandy by Bob Welch. This was a well-written and pretty well-crafted account of one of the first Army Nurses to land on Normandy after D-Day. Army nurse history is an area of history that I don't know much about, and I found this book very touching and informative.
The Woman Who Smashed Codes by Jason Fagone. I got a little lost while reading this - I'm still not sure how a lot of the codes were smashed - but, overall, I enjoyed this one a lot. I especially appreciated how the Smith-Friedman relationship/marriage was portrayed - the only downside to it was the occasional oversharing of information by the author.
We Band of Angels by Elizabeth M. Norman. This book covers the Army (and Navy) nurses who were stationed in the Philippines when the US entered WWII. Again, this was very informative, but occasionally hard to read as the author didn't shy away from what was endured - first in the battefield and then in the Japanese camps. I disagreed with some of the author's commentary, but did appreciate the conflict the Army/officers dealt with between allowing the nurses do their calling and trying to protect the nurses.
Panhandle Cowboy by John R. Erickson. I'd only read Erickson's
Hank the Cowdog books before, but I was intrigued by the idea of nonfiction by him. It turned out that the book was Erickson recounting his time ranching in the panhandle of Oklahoma during the 1970s; I found it a quick but entertaining read. It was nice to see his great sense of storytelling applied to real events.
