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Monthly Archives: March 2011

Book Blogger Hop

Book Blogger HopI’m participating in this week’s Book Blogger Hop!

This week’s question is
Since today is April Fool’s Day in the USA, what is the best prank you have ever played on someone OR that someone has played on you?

My answer–

I used to put together a newsletter for our playgroup, and each of the 3 or so years, I put in an April Fools event that seemed really over the top to me, but I always had someone RSVPing.  The only one I remember was saying we’d drive all night, spend the day at Disneyland (with our toddlers) and then drive all night to get home again.  I guess I’m not a dedicated enough Disney fan!

Here’s what the Book Blogger Hop is:

In the spirit of the Twitter Friday Follow, the Book Blogger Hop is a place just for book bloggers and readers to connect and share our love of the written word! This weekly BOOK PARTY is an awesome opportunity for book bloggers to connect with other book lovers, make new friends, support each other, and generally just share our love of books! It will also give blog readers a chance to find other book blogs to read! So, grab the logo, post about the Hop on your blog, and start HOPPING through the list of blogs that are posted in the Linky list!!

Drop a comment and say hello! Point me to your post and check out the other blogs on the hop.

 
5 Comments

Posted by on March 31, 2011 in blogging, books, meme

 

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Review: Where She Went by Gayle Forman

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I admit, in spite of everything I’d heard, I really didn’t think Where She Went would live up to If I Stay. I’m very happy to say It did.

(The mere existence of this book is a spoiler for If I Stay.  I try not to go into to many details, but if you haven’t read If I Stay yet, go and read it now.  It’s that good.  This review will be here when you finish).

Where She Went sets up another unusual situation, following up on the events of If I Stay.

Mia has moved on with her life. To the outside world, it looks like Adam has as well, but he hasn’t. He’s outwardly successful (rock-star successful, literally), but he’s really having trouble with, well, everything.

Where She Went has one important thing in common with If I Stay– an incredible character portrait. I have a hard time with young men in books, and I didn’t really think I would find Adam sympathetic, let alone compelling, even though I did like him when I first met him.

His character was compelling, and his story interesting, and yet he was completely believable. He was bewildered by the path he’d been sent down. He channeled his anger into rock songs, and followed them to success with a band that didn’t end up being the tight knit family he’d naively expected.

There was enough obnoxious rock star behavior to be realistic, and enough of what what going on in his head to understand why he behaved that way. And (channeling the male member of my book club),his thoughts weren’t detailed meta analysis of his life and that of everyone around him, but rather a continuing pit of emotion and questions about why he ended up .

Any fan of If I Stay should read this book immediately. If you haven’t read If I Stay, fix that immediately.

This copy of Where She Went was provided to Pam @ Bookalicious for review.  She was kind enough to loan it to me, since I was anxious to read it.

 
7 Comments

Posted by on March 31, 2011 in books, reviews

 

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Book Thoughts: True Grit by Charles Portis (audiobook)

True GritMy rating: 4 of 5 stars

I’m not calling this a review because I’m in a more rambling mood than critical one.

I have an unreasonable prejudice against Westerns.  Maybe I was traumatized by one as a small child, and have blocked the memory to protect myself.  Then again, maybe I just pay too much attention to the stereotypes of manly men and gun battles.

True Grit is the story of a 14 year old girl that heads into Indian country with a US Marshall and a Texas Ranger in order to find the man that killed her father and bring him to justice.

I finally went to see the movie because it had a lot of Oscar buzz, and there wasn’t really anything else that interested me playing at the time I was available.  I liked the movie more than I thought I would, but I didn’t love it.

I figured that would be the end of it, but not long after, the book showed up on the Audible.com $5 book sale.  I’d heard that the movie was very faithful the the book, and decided I was $5 and 6 hours worth of curious.

I suspect this would have been a very different book for me if I’d listened to it before seeing the movie, and I’m not sure I would have enjoyed it as much. I’ll never know, of course.

The narrator had much the same cadence to her delivery as Hailee Steinfeld did in the movie, even though her voice was different.  Somehow this was enough to bring the visuals of the movie into my mind in a way that rarely happens for me, even when I read a book after watching the movie.  In fact, I very rarely visualize a book when reading (whether print or audio), so this was an interesting experience for me.

An side effect was that when the shooting started (What, it’s a Western!) I wasn’t in the mood to deal with that at the time  (I hid my eyes during the movie.  Not a great idea when I was driving, and since the picture was in my head, it probably wouldn’t have helped anyway).

I actually spent two days going back and forth between True Grit and a Doctor Who novelization (which also contained shooting, but since it was between Sontarans and people who were infected by alien spores and could then shoot light from their hands, somehow didn’t bother me as much).

Why did this story work for me?  Because of the character of Mattie, who is by no means your average 14 year old.  She’s a great character, and reminds me a little of one 14 year old I know, not in any detail, but in her spirit– her grit.   Mattie was sassy and self confident, but completely unaware of how she appeared to others. Watching Mattie and Rooster grow through the book (and movie) was a treat.

So, am I going to go read more Westerns?  Probably not, although I may pick up Lonesome Dove at some point, since so many bloggers have raved about it over the last year.  I am a little more willing to entertain the idea.of reading (or watching) them in general.

 
2 Comments

Posted by on March 29, 2011 in books, reviews

 

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Mailbox Monday

My mailbox looks a little like this one!Welcome to Mailbox Monday!

Mailbox Monday is a place to share all the wonderful books that have come to live in your home– including paper books, e-books and audio books.

Mailbox Monday was started by Marcia, who is now blogging at A girl and her books. When Marcia was ready to move on from being the weekly host, she was kind enough to set up the Mailbox Monday Blog Tour, and I’ve had the pleasure of hosting in March.

Alas, my turn is at an end, and I’m passing the baton to Amy at Passages to the Past.  I hope to see you there in April.

The link to take you to the Linky page is at the bottom of this page.

As for my mailbox:

Book for review:

The Cat, the Lady and the Liar by Leann Sweeney

I’ve always enjoyed Leann Sweeney’s cozy mysteries, so I was thrilled to have the opportunity to review her newest book.

Cat quilter Jillian Hart finds a gorgeous stray cat belonging to the fabulously wealthy Ritaestelle Longworth, who believes she’s being drugged. Before Jillian can get to those charges, a body turns up in the lake-and her cat Chablis finds Ritaestelle nearby. Can Jillian’s cats aid her in solving a mystery with decades old roots?

 

 

Your turn

What came in your mailbox this week? Click on the linky and leave your link, then visit some of the others!

I can’t embed the Linky on this page, since I have a WordPress.com blog. I’m thinking about trying another host, probably Dreamhost. Any feedback is appreciated!

 
34 Comments

Posted by on March 27, 2011 in books, meme

 

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Book Blogger Hop

Book Blogger HopI’m participating in this week’s Book Blogger Hop!

This week’s question is
“If you could physically put yourself into a book or series…which one would it be and why?”

My answer–

This is a tough one!  I’m tempted to say Jasper Fforde’s Thurdsay Next books, because Thursday has the ability to jump into a book :-) .

Beyond that, I don’t really know.  Every Utopia has its dark side, every friendly community has its outcasts. I might enjoy the world of a book from the view of its characters, but where I live now is the life I’ve chosen in the location I’ve chosen.

Here’s what the Book Blogger Hop is:

In the spirit of the Twitter Friday Follow, the Book Blogger Hop is a place just for book bloggers and readers to connect and share our love of the written word! This weekly BOOK PARTY is an awesome opportunity for book bloggers to connect with other book lovers, make new friends, support each other, and generally just share our love of books! It will also give blog readers a chance to find other book blogs to read! So, grab the logo, post about the Hop on your blog, and start HOPPING through the list of blogs that are posted in the Linky list!!

Drop a comment and say hello! Point me to your post and check out the other blogs on the hop.

 
12 Comments

Posted by on March 25, 2011 in blogging, books, Me, meme

 

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Review: Dying for Mercy by Mary Jane Clark (audiobook)

Dying for MercyMy rating: 4 of 5 stars

A quick moving, entertaining mystery. I’m not entirely sure it all held together, but I’m not going to worry too much about it.

Summary via Goodreads:

When death shatters the serenity of the exclusive moneyed enclave of Tuxedo Park, New York, Eliza Blake, cohost of the country’s premier morning television show KEY to America, is on the scene. While attending a lavish gala at her friends’ newly renovated estate, Pentimento, Eliza’s host is found dead—a grotesque suicide that is the first act in a macabre and intricately conceived plan to expose the sins of the past involving some of the town’s most revered citizens.

Determined to find out the truth, Eliza and her KEY News colleagues—producer Annabelle Murphy, cameraman B.J. D’Elia, and psychiatrist Margo Gonzalez—discover that Pentimento holds the key. Nestled in the park’s sprawling architectural masterpieces, picturesque gardeners’ cottages, and lush, rolling landscape, the glorious mansion is actually a giant “puzzle house,” filled with ingenious clues hidden in its fireplaces, fountains, and frescoes that lead them from one suspicious locale to another—and, one by one, to the victims of a fiendish killer.

As Pentimento gives up its secrets, it becomes clear that no amount of wealth or privilege will keep the residents of Tuxedo Park safe. But just when Eliza unearths one final surprise, she comes face-to-face with a murderer who believes that some puzzles should never be solved.

My first experience with the author was with her more recent To Have and to Kill. I thought her writing style didn’t work well with the cozy mystery, but thought it might work better with this series, which seemed a little grittier.

I was right about that. My guess that her TV experience would lend some appeal to her writing about a TV morning show host also proved true.

The mystery was (deliberately) convoluted. I took it for the entertainment value, and chose not to worry about things like how the bad guys were really making everything much worse for themselves, and how unlikely some of their actions were.  Even the framework of the puzzles promised more than they delivered, but that actually worked for me, given the character of the puzzlemaker.

I found the setting in the closed community of Tuxedo Park to be intriguing, an unfamiliar world within a familiar one.  I really liked how the closed setting forced a situation where those involved all knew one another– a very small town in a much larger community.

I enjoyed the character of Eliza Blake. She’s a tough, smart woman. There were references to events that had happened before, and I’m interested in going back to fill in the details, and to get to know the secondary characters a little better.  They weren’t particularly well fleshed out in this book, but I suspect that the cumulative picture is more interesting.

Audiobook notes

Narrator: Isabel Keating does a competent job with Dying for Mercy.  I didn’t love her voice, but it wasn’t distracting, either.  Her voices for the different characters worked well to distinguish between them.

Production: This was a solid production, with no real issues.  It’s a small thing, but I really appreciate that the large number of chapters meant that each disc could start at a chapter break.

Audio or Print? Your choice.  I don’t think the audio version adds to or detracts from the book.

 
3 Comments

Posted by on March 24, 2011 in books, reviews

 

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Review: Stiltsville by Susanna Daniel (with book club notes)

Stiltsville: A Novel
My rating: 4 of 5 stars (before the book club meeting)
4.5 of 5 stars (after the book club meeting)

A look at the life of a very normal woman, with normal challenges, over the course of many years. A quick, enjoyable read.

Summary via the author’s website:

One sunny morning in 1969, Frances Ellerby finds herself in a place called Stiltsville, a community of houses built on pilings in the middle of Biscayne Bay. It’s the first time the Atlanta native has been out on the open water, and she’s captivated. On the dock of a stilt house, with the dazzling Miami skyline in the distance, she meets the house’s owner, Dennis DuVal—and a new future reveals itself.

Turning away from her quiet, predictable life back home, Frances moves to Miami to be with Dennis. Over time, she earns the confidence of his wild-at-heart sister and the approval of his oldest friend. Frances and Dennis marry and have a child—but rather than growing complacent about their good fortune, they continue to face the challenges of intimacy in the complicated city they call home.

I really liked this book while reading it, and I’m having a hard time pinpointing what made it work so well.

I think I just really liked that it was a book that was about an ordinary life– 25 years of one. I recognized some of the situations Frances found herself in, others will never happen to me, but might to other people I know. Some things could have had an entire book written exploring the ins and outs of that particular situation, but here, they all are part of the ebbs and flows of life moving along.

The book focuses on the relationship between Frances and Dennis, starting when they meet for the first time (at the house in Stiltsville), and continuing as they marry, have a child, and continue their lives together.

I was going to say that time wasn’t wasted on minutia, but that isn’t quite right. It’s just that the minutia that comes up is somehow important, whether because it reflects on the characters (when Frances and her best friend swap dresses at a wedding, and find they are both happier), or because it reflects more deeply into what is happening (Frances taking her daughter Margo to get her ears pierced marks a coming of age for Margo, but also highlights the the relationship between Margo and her parents, and not in the obvious way).

And that’s life. The details make up the whole.

Book Club Notes

I read this book with one of my book clubs.  This was one of the books my friend Ruth won in an on-line giveaway. (10 copies of 12 different books!  Although we never did get all of them.  This is the 4th one we’ve read and discussed).

I was a little worried about how the discussion would go, since I was having trouble articulating what made the book work for me.  I felt more secure once I had the discussion questions from Susanna Daniel’s website.  As it turns out, we didn’t really need them.

I wasn’t alone in finding it difficult to capture my thoughts on the book– several people said that while they were reading it, they really liked it, but when they were done, they stopped and asked “Why?”.  Each of us was able to identify a different aspect of the book that we appreciated, and talk about the questions that popped up for some club members.

In the end, my opinion of the book was strengthened by the meeting.  I was able to recognize the range of characters, all of which were balanced in their strengths and weaknesses.  I grew to understand more what did (or didn’t) drive Dennis and Frances.  I appreciated the choice of moments that made up the book as a whole. And more than any of that, I appreciated having a book club that could help me love a book even more than I had before.

 
7 Comments

Posted by on March 23, 2011 in Book Club, books, L, reviews

 

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Review: The Orchid Affair by Lauren Willig

The Orchid Affair (Pink Carnation, #7)My rating: 4.25 of 5 stars

The historical section of The Orchid Affair was great. The modern section seemed mostly to serve to influence the pace of the book as a whole– I enjoyed it, but it wasn’t very substantial.

Summary via Lauren Willig’s website:

Laura Grey, a veteran governess, joins the Selwick Spy School expecting to find elaborate disguises and thrilling exploits in service to the spy known as the Pink Carnation. She hardly expects her first assignment to be serving as governess for the children of Andre Jaouen, right-hand man to Bonaparte’s minister of police. Jaouen and his arch rival, Gaston Delaroche, are investigating a suspected Royalist plot to unseat Bonaparte, and Laura’s mission is to report any suspicious findings. At first the job is as lively as Latin textbooks and knitting, but Laura begins to notice strange behavior from Jaouen—secret meetings and odd comings and goings. As Laura edges closer to her employer, she makes a shocking discovery and is surprised to learn that she has far more in common with Jaouen than she originally thought.

Of course, I’m always a sucker for characters named Laura, but I really liked this one. I particularly appreciated how she was introduced showing the formal, reserved governess facade she shows the world, and how the layers were peeled away as I grew to know her better.

Then again, who wouldn’t love a 30+ year old governess freshly out of spy school?

I thought the author had just the right touch with Laura’s two young charges– they had personalities appropriate to their ages, and enough spark to make them interesting without being so precocious as to cause eye-rolling on my part.

And the love interest! I loved this young father trying to figure out what was right and wrong in his society, trying to protect his young children from the fallout of his political involvement. The relationship developed with a nice balance of conflict, common interests, and attraction.

I liked the French setting, as a counterpoint to the previous novels. It seems such a confusing time for the citizens of France. Pretty much all I know about this era of history is from fiction, too much of that being romance novels where I don’t trust the accuracy. For better or worse, I do trust Lauren Willig to have her facts about the time period correct.

And then there was the contemporary portion of the book.

The first chapter– the recap of what has happened in the series to this point– was fantastic.  It had me laughing while refreshing my memory of all the things my sieve of a mind had forgotten.  It’d allow anyone to jump into the series at this book if they wanted, filling in the earlier books at their convenience.

After that?  I enjoyed Eloise, Colin, and Colin’s convoluted family party.  I was highly indignant at the turn of events presented there.  Eloise had me giggling on a regular basis.  Even with all that, I still felt this story is being relegated to a more minor role in each book.  That’s OK with me.  I loved The Mischief of the Mistletoe, which had no contemporary pieces.

As always, I’m looking forward to the next book in the series!

This book was sent to me by Kate from The Parchment Girl.  She received it from the publisher.

 
3 Comments

Posted by on March 22, 2011 in books, reviews

 

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Mailbox Monday

My mailbox looks a little like this one!Welcome to Mailbox Monday!

Mailbox Monday is a place to share all the wonderful books that have come to live in your home– including paper books, e-books and audio books.

Mailbox Monday was started by Marcia of The Printed Page. When Marcia was ready to move on from being the weekly host, she was kind enough to set up the Mailbox Monday Blog Tour, and this month, I’m hosting!

The link to take you to the Linky page is at the bottom of this page.

As for my mailbox:

Books for review:

Heart of Deception by M.L. Malcolm

I really enjoyed Heart of Lies when I read it last year, so I asked to be on the TLC Books tour for the followup book, Heart of Deception, and I’m really looking forward to reading it!

A man of many contradictions, Leo Hoffman is a Hungarian national with a French passport, a wealthy businessman with no visible means of support, and a devoted father who hasn’t seen his daughter in years. He is also a spy.
Recruited by the Allies to help lay the groundwork for their invasion of North Africa, Leo intends to engage in as little espionage as possible—just enough to earn his American citizenship so he can get to New York and reunite with his daughter, Maddy. But while Leo dodges death in France and Morocco, Maddy is learning shocking truths about her father’s mysterious past—haunting knowledge that will compel her down her own dangerous path of deception and discovery.

Your turn

What came in your mailbox this week? Click on the linky and leave your link, then visit some of the others!

I can’t embed the Linky on this page, since I have a WordPress.com blog. I’m thinking about trying another host, probably Dreamhost. Any feedback is appreciated!

 
35 Comments

Posted by on March 20, 2011 in books, meme

 

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Book Blogger Hop

Book Blogger HopI’m participating in this week’s Book Blogger Hop!

This week’s question is
Do you read only one book at a time, or do you have several going at once?

My answer–

I always have at least two books going at a time– one audio book and one paper book.  I often have a book going on my Nook as well.

Sometimes I’ll be caught without the book I was reading, and start another (I keep an emergency backup book in my car at all times, except when my husband cleans out my car for me.).  Sometimes I’ll need to take a break from my book club book or a review book, so I’ll pick up something light and fluffy for a quick change of pace.  I’ll often have a non-fiction book that I’m reading slowly, no more than a chapter a day. Right now, I have a non-fiction book I’m reading over the course of the school year with a group from my daughters school.

I generally try to make sure that the books are of different genres, although even that isn’t always enough– I’ve had occasions where two very, very different books will have characters that are similar enough to confuse me, for instance.  Sometimes I just cope, sometimes I’ll postpone one book until I finish another.

Here’s what the Book Blogger Hop is:

In the spirit of the Twitter Friday Follow, the Book Blogger Hop is a place just for book bloggers and readers to connect and share our love of the written word! This weekly BOOK PARTY is an awesome opportunity for book bloggers to connect with other book lovers, make new friends, support each other, and generally just share our love of books! It will also give blog readers a chance to find other book blogs to read! So, grab the logo, post about the Hop on your blog, and start HOPPING through the list of blogs that are posted in the Linky list!!

Drop a comment and say hello! Point me to your post and check out the other blogs on the hop.

 
14 Comments

Posted by on March 17, 2011 in blogging, meme

 

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