Monday, June 15, 2026

Yesteryear by Caro Claire Burke

Monday, June 15, 2026--San Antonio

Yesteryear by Caro Claire Burke has been among the most popular books of this year.  I read it only because it became available in unlimited supply from my library for one weekend--a download to my Kindle.  I cannot say that it was a pleasure to read it.  Why?  Because ALL of the characters except for Maeve, the delightful, happy, youngest daughter, were despicable people.  And my question is:  How can anyone find pleasure reading a story filled with such people?  The main protagonist is a woman who has grown up poor in a home with no father but has gotten a full-ride scholarship to Harvard.  She is a fundamentalist Christian, so being at Harvard is a challenge socially.  She meets and marries a man who has grown up in a wealthy family with national political ties.  Yet her husband is the youngest and the weekest of the sons in his family--spoiled rotten without any interest in applying himself to any type of real world task.  Because of this, the woman decides she must be the one to make their life work.  But problems develop and multiply.  She has to keep her husband happy by keeping him thinking he is as important to the endeavor as she is.  Her personality is mostly grim and demanding of others, so to be the social influencer she is becoming she must provide a false impression of her real self.  This book has all of the problems of the present times--corrupt politics, talk of a coming civil war, envy, jealousy, lying, cheating, broadcasts and social media "spinning" stories, etc.  I waded through the book to the end.  If I rate it on how pleasurable it was to read it, I would have to give it no more than 2 1/2 stars out of 5.  But this unpleasureable book was well constructed, so I will give it an overall rating of 3 1/2 stars out of 5.

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