Tag Archives: Sisters

Sisters on the Seas: Sisters of Fortune and The Titanic Sisters

28 Feb

Sisters of Fortune
by Anna Lee Huber

Anna Lee Huber’s new novel, Sisters of Fortune, is based on the true story of the upper class, Canadian, Fortune family who were amongst the passengers who boarded the Titanic for its tragic maiden voyage in 1912. I had recently visited Nova Scotia cemetery where many of the passengers were buried and it was a very moving experience so this story peaked my interest. Huber does a great job of merging interesting historical facts about the three sisters and other notable passengers such as one of the sister’s receiving a warning about going out to sea by an Egyptian fortuneteller, with a thrilling storyline including family drama. A fictional romance, based on the lives of two real tennis champ who were also on the Titanic, will have fans of the James Cameron Titanic movie hooked. The ship is discussed in such depth it felt as if it were a character in and of itself. If you enjoy Sisters of Fortune and historic fiction, you can also borrow other books by Huber including those in her Verity Kent historic mystery series, which is set in 1919 and 1920. 

The Titanic Sisters
by Patricia Falvey

Patricia Falvey’s The Titanic Sisters tells the fictional story of Delia and Nora Sweeny, two very different Irish sisters, one a statuesque, curvy brunette, the apple of her mother’s eye, and the other a petite pale pixie, who is a daddy’s girl. Nora hopes for a rich husband while her sister dreams of exploring foreign lands she reads about in books. When a relative provides them the means to travel to NY along with a position for Nora as a governess for the daughter of a wealthy widower, it seems both their wishes will be granted. But the ship they are on the Titanic, of course never makes it to their port of call and the two sisters separated in the chaos, wind up on very different paths from what was planned for each of them. I was surprised that unlike Huber’s novel, this story only took place for a very short time on the boat itself, but the twisty tale full of romance, deception, and drama still made for an enjoyable listen to the audio book version read by Esther Wane featuring a charming Irish brogue.

Written by:
Aimee Harris
Information and Digital Services Manager

Bridging Racial Divides: The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett

3 Mar

I’ve been waiting to read a book like The Vanishing Half for a long time.

As someone who reads a lot of fiction, I’m very fussy about what I read. I’m always looking for a new and interesting way to tell a story, and this book certainly does that. On the surface, the book tells the simple story about a set of twin girls who live in a very small town named Mallard. The town is so small that it doesn’t even officially appear on a map, but we do know that they are in the Deep South. The girls are described as being of African American descent. And both the town they live in and the girl’s mother sees them as such. But when the girls run away from home at sixteen, Desiree continues to be seen as African American while Stella is able to pass herself off as a white woman. The two roads that these women take because of their seemingly differing racial identities lead them on two journeys that are both heartbreaking and wonderful.

I love the way that Brit Bennett frames the way that the girls are treated differently because of how they’re seen, how Stella deals with “passing” as a white woman, and how ultimately, the twins have to come back together in order to move forward. Bennett does a great job of describing what it’s like to have an identical twin sister, and how the Vignes sisters are two halves of a whole.

I think that this is a book that we need right now in 2021. The racial divides that have been haunting our country are stated so clearly in this book. I feel that this book tackles race in a new way that can make people realize just how important it is to talk about race openly and with compassion. As an Asian American woman, I have seen how people in this country have found a way to be even more openly racist towards people like me because of Covid 19 being called the “China disease.” We need literature like this to bring people together and in order to have honest conversations about race.

This book is available at the Hoboken Library through BCCLS in regular print, large print, as a book on CD, and on Playaway. It is also available as digital audiobooks and ebooks from eLibraryNJ and eBCCLS.

Written by:
Nicole Marconi
Library Assistant, Children’s Department