Saturday, June 20, 2026

The Secret Library (Kekla Magoon)


There was a lot going on in this book. The family history aspect was interesting....go back in time to learn about your family. She'd run into the same people again and again and it was confusing to keep straight who the person was and how old they were or what year it was. Time travel is not my favorite genre. It felt like maybe there should be a second book because many of the issues between Dally and her mother are not resolved - but Dailly has time traveled to the future and skipped a bunch of years (broke all the time travel rules!) so a resolution won't be possible. I thought the ending was rushed and rather incomplete.

The idea of a secret library is interesting. This is the key in the time travel - pick a book from your shelves and a cloud starts to form. Off you go! Sometimes the writing seemed quite didactic and sometimes it just wasn't conceivable at all that this is how a child would converse with people.

The main character says she's biracial but as the story ends, you discover that her mother, who is presented as a white woman, actually had a black father - something he kept hidden.  Even Dally's mother didn't know. No one knew. Oh the complexities of family history!

There was a lot of commentary on historic events. In chapter 29, she arrives at a Juneteenth celebration where her parents are, but they aren't married yet. I read this on Juneteenth....so that was a weird twist of fate. There is talk of LGBTQ issues and it's interesting to compare how the issues are viewed in the past to today, however, it was weird addition to the story and seemed like it was thrown in to make sure the author hit on all sorts of current issues: family secrets, LGBTQ lessons, weird explanations about scientific realities today, sex education (a baby is born, mother's water breaks...the whole lots of details kids don't need), segregation and racism issues as well. For an audience of 8-12 year olds, this would open a lot of questions unless they were REALLY well versed in history, which is quite unlikely. I would recommend it for readers over 12, for sure. The book banners would have a heyday with this one. Luckily, most kids didn't finish it and for those who said they did (that's questionable), clearly it was over their head.

This book was a lesson in why it's important to read the book before I suggest it for book club. This one was not a great choice. During our book club meeting we learned about resources online to research your genealogy. I logged into my Family Search account and showed them famous people I was related to. They really enjoyed that.

Goodreads says:
Since Grandpa died, Dally’s days are dull and restricted. She’s eleven and a half years old, and her exacting single mother is already grooming her to take over the family business. Starved for adventure and release, Dally rescues a mysterious envelope from her mother’s clutches, an envelope Grandpa had earmarked for her. The map she finds inside leads straight to an ancient vault, a library of secrets where each book is a portal to a precise moment in time.


As Dally “checks out” adventure after adventure—including an exhilarating outing with pirates—she begins to dive deep into her family’s hidden history. Soon she’s visiting every day to escape the demands of the present. But the library has secrets of its own, intentions that would shape her life as surely as her mother’s meticulous plans. What will Dally choose?

Equal parts mystery and adventure—with a biracial child puzzling out her identity alongside the legacy of the past—this masterful middle-grade fantasy rivets with crackling prose, playful plot twists, and timeless themes. A satisfying choice for fans of Kindred and When You Reach Me.

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Hearing the Voice of the Lord (Gerald N. Lund)

 


Our ward RS started a library and this was the first book I borrowed. I think this would make a great book to study as a group. It could lead to some great discussions. I think it's a good book to have on your shelf and go back to again and again when questions about hearing God come up. Luckily, as I was reading it, my husband reminded me that we do own a copy. LOL  There are a lot of great stories to help cement his points. I really liked that he takes a lot of time to address false revelations. We don't always hear a lot about that.

I'm not sure I have a resolution to why God seems to answers people's seemingly unimportant prayers (finding keys, remembering an important ingredient before you put something in the oven) versus the big ones like being prompted to check on your baby before they drown or choke or are lost to crib death or die in utero. The best answer I seemed to find is that sometimes people just aren't listening...which doesn't help with the guilt when bad things happen.

I didn't like the formatting of quotes scattered here and there through the text. It requires a break in following the thought to go to the side-bar and read a related quote. I would have preferred the quotes to be part of the text. They seemed quite random.

Quotes/sections I marked:

He has a little story of eaves dropping on his daughter playing with a group of friends. She had just finished kindergarten and was playing school. He says she said, "I'm going to teach you everything I know." and then starting teaching kids he letters of the alphabet to her rapt audience. He compares that to teaching religion classes. "As I stand before my religion classes and 'teach them everything I know' about the gospel, is that what Heavenly Father Does? Does He stand back and watch, smiling gently at my naive innocence" He said a few days later, he wrote this poem in his journal:

I know that next to God and His great wisdom,
My mind is "child", and there's much more to get.
Like children playing school in summer sunshine,
I barely know the basic alphabet.


I also loved his bit in chapter 28 about reducing the noise in our life. He ways when we can't hear someone we're speaking to we have four possibilities, and these are things we can consider with person revelation:

  • I could have asked her to speak more loudly. obviously that option wouldn't apply if we were talking about revelation. It isn't our privilege to request louder - most distinct and more recognizable - forms of revelation from the Lord.
  • I could have turned down or eliminated some of the other noise by turning off the movie, sending the kids outside, and so forth.
  • I could have moved closer to her.
  • I could have concentrated and focused on her and what she was saying, trying to  screen out some of the other noice.
Later in the book, he also talks about how important it is to filter out what is unnecessary - even in our church callings.

Occasionally, we fine some who become so energetic in their Church service that their lives become unbalanced. They start believing that the programs they administer are more important than the people they serve. They complicate their service with needless frills and embellishments that occupy too much time, cost too much money, and sap too much energy. They refuse to delegate or allow others to grow in their respective responsibilities. (From O Be Wise by M. Russell Ballard, p. 18)
Learning to hear:
He tells a story of playing some music for a group of people and then asks them to tell him everything they could about it. Some of the comments were:
  • It's got some scratches in the record.
  • It's classical music.
  • I think it's a piece by Beethoven.
  • Yes, it's the second movement from the Eroica Symphony (from a music major)
The principal is that the more we know and understand about revelation, the more we will be able to recognize it when it comes.

Goodreads says:
How can we navigate safely through our turbulent times? Personal revelation is one key! Elder Gerald N. Lund, million-selling author of The Work and the Glory, offers profound insights about how personal revelation 'works.' Learn how we can increase our ability to receive and recognize personal revelation, what we can do to avoid being misled, and many other ideas relevant to this tremendously important spiritual gift.