What We Are Reading Today: The Crowded Hour by Clay Risen

Updated 07 June 2019
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What We Are Reading Today: The Crowded Hour by Clay Risen

  • The story of the most famous regiment in American history

This is the dramatic story of the most famous regiment in American history: The Rough Riders, a motley group of soldiers led by Theodore Roosevelt, whose daring exploits marked the beginning of American imperialism in the 20th century. 

The Crowded Hour “is not a biography of Theodore Roosevelt nor is it a full description of the Spanish-American War or even the liberation of Cuba from Spanish control,” said a review in goodreads.com.  

“It is, however, an in-depth portrayal of Roosevelt’s Rough Riders and their trials getting to, fighting in, and return from the Cuban conflict. There were many failures on the part of the national government and the army hierarchy that were tragic and unnecessary,” it added.

The Crowded Hour “dives deep into the daily lives and struggles of Roosevelt and his regiment. Using diaries, letters, and memoirs, Clay Risen illuminates a disproportionately influential moment in American history: A war of only six months’ time that dramatically altered the US standing in the world,” said the review.


Book Review: ‘Winter Garden’ by Kristin Hannah

Updated 09 January 2026
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Book Review: ‘Winter Garden’ by Kristin Hannah

Kristin Hannah’s “Winter Garden” is a novel that gradually unfolds into something deeply emotional and haunting.

At its heart are two sisters who could not be more different. Meredith has stayed home, building a life around responsibility, family, and the demanding work of running the apple orchard.

Nina has done the opposite, chasing stories across the world as a celebrated photojournalist, avoiding roots and the weight they carry.

Reading “Winter Garden” feels like slowly peeling back layers of a family. The differences between the two sisters feel real, and so does the tension between them.

But what will really move you is their cold, unreachable mother Anya and the way her silence seems to freeze the entire house.

For most of the book readers will ask why she cannot show love. Why is everything so guarded? The only softness in her comes through the Russian fairytale she tells — and even that story is always unfinished.

When the sisters’ father becomes ill and asks that the story finally be told to its end, the novel shifts in a way that genuinely surprises. The fairytale slowly turns into truth. As Anya begins revealing her past in Leningrad — the hunger, the fear, the impossible choices — you feel your perception of her change page by page.

You will start judging her, pitying her, and finally understand that sometimes silence is just another way of surviving.

What makes the book feel personal is the reminder that our parents are not just parents: They are entire worlds of lost dreams, mistakes, heartbreaks, and secrets we may never fully uncover. And sometimes the distance we feel from them has nothing to do with us; it comes from wounds they never healed.

“Winter Garden” is not the kind of novel that grabs you right away. It is slow, heavy at times, and painful. But the emotional payoff is worth it. By the end you feel as though you have been invited into someone’s private grief.