First: Sandra Day O’Connor, Evan Thomas

“I’ve never done a job that I didn’t think was a stretch.”

Sandra Day O’Connor

I love reading biographies. Not every biography, certainly. They have a reputation for being dry and overly long, and of course some of them are. Worse is when a biography begs the reader to worship at the feet of the subject, showing only the positive while skimming over the negative. So it’s true that not every biography is worth your time. But I’ve read several biographies that are truly moving, and First: Sandra Day O’Connor by Evan Thomas is one of them. I was touched by Thomas’s portrait of this powerhouse woman.

If you’re like me before I read this book, you know Sandra Day O’Connor was a justice on the U.S. Supreme Court, but that’s about it. She certainly doesn’t have the same place in popular culture that’s occupied by Ruth Bader Ginsburg, for example. That said, I wish people knew more about her, because I was inspired by her determination, intelligence, and grit, even if I don’t necessarily agree with her every ruling or viewpoint.

Sandra Day O’Connor—or SOC, as she’s referred to in her husband’s journals—grew up on a ranch in Arizona surrounded by honest-to-goodness cowboys. Her childhood wasn’t what I’d call idyllic, but it was happy. She attended law school at Stanford University where she was one of the few women in the program. She graduated at the top of her class only to find that real law firms cared more about her gender than her legal prowess, so her husband John was offered a well-paying job while firm after firm told her that she’d be more suited to secretarial work.

Undeterred, she won a seat on the Arizona State Senate and managed to find her place in a Boy’s Club, holding her own against snide comments and open mockery. She became a federal judge and was later appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court in 1981 by Ronald Reagan. She was the first woman to sit on the Supreme Court, and she held the deciding vote for a great deal of her time there.

That’s an extremely bare-bones summary of SOC’s incredible life, so I beg you to read this book to get a fuller picture of her. I got it on audiobook and I found myself making excuses to go on longer walks or car rides to get a few more minutes of listening in. I grew to love and admire the woman who helped pave the way for female lawyers and judges in the U.S., and who was a voice of integrity on the Supreme Court for decades. That’s not to say that she didn’t do some incredibly controversial things—her handling of Bush v. Gore in 2000, for example—but Evan Thomas convinced me that her heart was in the right place even as she made decisions that made a lot of people unhappy. I, like her colleagues on the Supreme Court and elsewhere, came to respect her.

Her relationship with her husband also really touched me. I love stories of couples who stick together and stick it out, even when times are hard. Her husband, John O’Connor, spent a lot of time in his wife’s shadow. In a time when other men might have resented her or tried to keep her down, he was so proud of her and did everything he could to lift her up. In fact, he was one of the ones who helped get her name in front of President Reagan for consideration to the Supreme Court. Sandra and John O’Connor are such a good example of love and mutual support.

Honestly, this whole book was just an inspiration. If you’re looking to learn about a fascinating woman while also feeling uplifted, this is the biography for you.

Happy Reading!

All Souls Trilogy, Deborah Harkness

“Magic is desire made real.”

Deborah Harkness, A Discovery of Witches

Once again, I’m way late to the game. Apparently these books have been around for forever and I’ve got several friends who have already read them. I don’t know where I was when these were coming out, but I’d never even heard of them until a month or two ago when I saw the television adaptation advertised. I got curious and watched one episode, and that was enough to make me go out an pick the first book up immediately.

I was hooked. I think it took me a day and a half to tear my way through A Discovery of Witches. A lot of housework got neglected once I cracked this one open.

Here’s the thing—these books are really smart. Sure, they’re a vampire/witch forbidden love book series, and as such they might elicit an eye roll or two from people who are expecting—horror of horrors—something akin to Twilight. But aside from the fact that there are vampires in both series, the books are very different. Twilight is mind numbing. The All Souls Trilogy brilliantly combines fantasy, science, history, and philosophy. Without giving too much away, let me just say that the vampire in this story is a scientist who has used his immortality to gain numerous degrees and areas of expertise in order to study the origin of vampires. He wants to know how vampires came to be and what, if anything, can be done to save them. His path crosses with Dr. Diana Bishop, a witch who refuses to practice magic, choosing instead to pursue an academic career as an expert in the history of the science of alchemy.

Shadow of Night, the second book in the series, felt a little slower to me. In an effort to find answers and track down a lost manuscript, the pair travel to 16th-century England. From a historical perspective, it was really enjoyable. I loved experiencing London in 1590 and watching Matthew and Diana interact with the likes of Elizabeth I, Walter Raleigh, and Christopher Marlowe.

That said, I felt like Harkness, a historian herself, got so bogged down in describing the past that the plot got lost a little bit. Of the three books, this was the one that dragged the most for me.

Harkness wrapped everything up with The Book of Life, in which Matthew and Diana each must confront their own past to find a way forward. I liked Matthew’s arc, but I was really pleased with how Harkness allowed Diana to develop as a character and really come into her own. Throughout the previous two books she’d relied a lot on Matthew, but in the final book of the series the tables are turned and she’s able to step up and get things done. It was fantastic.

I have a feeling that I’ll be returning to this series again. I’m sure there are things I missed that I’ll catch with a second reading. The plot here is so intricate and there’s so much going on that I know I’ll appreciate it even more on a second read.

These books are marketed as romance books and they’re certainly more in the New Adult category as opposed to Young Adult. There was some sexual content, but I appreciated that it was done pretty tastefully and the scenes were quite short. Some authors (looking at you Sarah J. Maas) have sex scenes that last waaaaay too long. Deborah Harkness was able to get her point across in a few paragraphs—brief enough that it’s easy to skip and doesn’t disrupt the flow of the overall plot.

Anyway, these were the books that got me out of my aforementioned reading slump. If you’re experiencing one, maybe give them a try!

Happy Reading!