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Monthly Archives: September 2011

Devotion: A Memoir by Dani Shapiro (with book club notes)

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Dani Shapiro did an amazing job of capturing the middle-aged angst of a woman trying to figure out who she is, and that’s something I can really identify with.

For her, the search is manifested in looking for a religious and spiritual path. She isn’t comfortable with her father’s Orthodox Jewish history, but neither does she wish to leave Judaism entirely. She also looks into other traditions, finding mentors and gurus to guide her.

Ultimately, her journey was a solo one, even though the question of what she would teach her son was part of the reason she was searching. Her husband was not part of her journey, he was a surprisingly small portion of this book that went so deeply into the history of their marriage, the frighteningly serious illness of their son as a small baby, and their unsuccessful attempts to have another child.

Her parents play a larger role, but only in her looking back at her relationship with them. She seems a highly unreliable narrator when speaking of her dealing with her mother, but it is very clear this was a troubled relationship going back many years before her mother’s death.

The details of her journey have absolutely nothing in common with my path. Nonetheless, I identified strongly with her sense of searching, and with the loneliness of her journey. I don’t know that she has succeeded in her quest, but her movement along the way was inspirational to me.

Book Club Notes

I’m the one that suggested Devotion to the group, and we did vote it in, although it wasn’t a top vote getter.  Still, I was surprised that more than one person I expected to be intrigued by it admitted they’d dreaded reading it.

Luckily, the book won them over.  I think in the end, everyone appreciated the book, and there is only one person that may not have liked and enjoyed it.

We had a great discussion about her journey as compared to our own, about the parts of her story that the author chose to tell in this book, and about how her decisions did and didn’t make sense at times.  We all agreed we’d be interested in reading another book by her, possibly one of her novels.

I’d strongly recommend this book to book clubs of women of an age to be making this journey, who are willing to discuss their personal path a well as that taken in the book being discussed.  Other clubs may appreciate it as well.

I received this book for review from the publisher.  As soon as I heard about it, I knew I wanted to suggest it for my book club, so I delayed reading it until my group could do so as well.  Thank you, Harper Collins.

 
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Posted by on September 28, 2011 in Book Club, books, L, reviews

 

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Review: The Most Dangerous Thing by Laura Lippman (audiobook)

The Most Dangerous ThingMy rating: 4 of 5 stars

Summary via Audible.com:

Some secrets can’t be kept. . . .

Years ago, they were all the best of friends. But as time passed and circumstances changed, they grew apart, became adults with families of their own, and began to forget about the past—and the terrible lie they all shared. But now Gordon, the youngest and wildest of the five, has died and the others are thrown together for the first time in years. And then the revelations start. Could their long-ago lie be the reason for their troubles today? Each one of these old friends has to wonder if their secret has been discovered—and if someone within the circle is out to destroy them.

I associate Laura Lippman with mysteries, and I was expecting this book to fall somewhere in the mystery/thriller genre.

It doesn’t, not really. Yes, there is a death (and exactly what happened is murky), and people trying to deal with what happened shapes the lives of the 5 kids (and associated parents) involved, but that’s just one part of the story.

This is a story of friendships and how they change, and how who you are as a child can affect the rest of your life.

It’s an extremely character centered book, spread among many characters. This leads to a complex, textured story that may not get as much depth as I would have liked with any given character. All of the characters were interesting. None of them were entirely likeable, but that can make for good reading.

The book features changing points of view– including one that I encountered for the first time in The Weird Sisters. I’m sure it has a name, but it’s a collective “we” referring to a group POV. Each character is referred to individually, but the general narration in these sections is from them together.

Most of the book is third person, focusing on a changing set of characters, taken from those involved with the death of a man the five children knew. The book jumps between their childhood and adult years, after the youngest of them dies in a car crash.

It was fascinating to get the view of their childhood friendship from so many perspectives, both at the time and years later, and to see how it shaped each of them as they became adults.

As a fun side note, Tess Monaghan (the detective from Lippman’s long running series) makes a cameo appearance in this book. I’ve only read a few of the books featuring her, and it took me a little while to place the name.

I was absorbed in this book the whole way through, and the end packed quite a punch– I’m not sure that I liked it, but it really made an impression. I’d love to discuss it with others that read the book, and see what they thought.

Audiobook Notes

Sound Bytes @ Devourer of Books

For more audiobook reviews, check out Sound Bytes

Narrator: I was impressed with the clear, efficient delivery of Linda Edmond.

Production:  I had no issues.with the production of The Most Dangerous Thing.  After I finished reading, I started thinking about this review, and wondered if the book would have been more effective with multiple narrators (maybe one male, one female?), or a narrator with a more atmospheric voice.  Maybe, but this straightforward production allowed the voice of the book to come through, and that worked well in this case.

Audio or Print?  Whatever is more convenient for you.  I don’t think the audio production adds or detracts in this case.

For more audiobook reviews, check out Sound Bytes at Devourer of Books!

I received my copy of The Most Dangerous Thing for review from Harper Audio.  Thank you!

 

 
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Posted by on September 23, 2011 in books, reviews

 

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Review: The Tapestry of Love by Rosy Thornton

My rating: 4.5 of 5 stars

The Tapestry of Love was a beautiful read, with wonderful characters and a setting that truly came alive. (Plus, isn’t that cover gorgeous?)

Summary via Goodreads.com:

A rural idyll: that’s what Catherine is seeking when she sells her house in England and moves to a tiny hamlet in the Cévennes mountains. With her divorce in the past and her children grown, she is free to make a new start, and her dream is to set up in business as a seamstress. But this is a harsh and lonely place when you’re no longer just here on holiday. There is French bureaucracy to contend with, not to mention the mountain weather, and the reserve of her neighbors, including the intriguing Patrick Castagnol. And that’s before the arrival of Catherine’s sister, Bryony.

This book was truly a character piece, a portrait of a woman who has reached the stage of her life where she can make a new beginning without needed to take into accounts the needs of her (grown) children, her ex-husband, or her successful sister.

She’s ready to start a small business in a place she picks for herself, away from her well established routine in England. It’s a life that permits her to indulge her talent with tapestry work, cultivate a garden, get to know her new neighbors, and explore activities she never dreamed she’d try– like beekeeping.

The story explores her relationship with family: her children (both of them were characters with just enough depth for me to want to get to know them better; her sister (who turns Catherine’s life upside down when she comes to visit); and her mother (suffering from dementia, she’s both the easiest and hardest relationship to leave behind).

Catherine develops new relationships with her neighbors, and while they are interesting in and of themselves they also help show what kind of a person Catherine is and contribute to the picture of Catherine’s new home.

As a confirmed city (or at least suburbs) dweller, I was amazed how wonderful the rural French setting sounded. Even if I quickly came to my senses as far as my living there, I could really feel the appeal for Catherine, even with the downsides that were lovingly portrayed as well.

The only aspect of the book that didn’t entirely work for me was the potential romantic relationship with Patrick, the mysterious man of the mountains. If I didn’t love that aspect of the book, I didn’t hate it either, and it didn’t interfere with my overall enjoyment.

Overall, reading this book was a highly enjoyable experience.

I received my copy of The Tapestry of Love for review from the author– thank you!

 
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Posted by on September 21, 2011 in books, reviews

 

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Review: Murder Most Persuasive by Tracy Kiely

Murder Most PersuasiveMy rating: 4 of 5 stars

This book was light and fun!

Summary via Goodreads:

After the death of Elizabeth Parker’s great-uncle Martin Reynolds, the family’s house in the picturesque Maryland town of St. Michaels is sold. When the new owners dig up the pool, they find the body of the man thought to have run off eight years earlier after embezzling over a million dollars from the family business.

This grisly discovery not only unearths old questions about what really happened to the stolen money, but it brings Detective Joe Muldoon back into the family’s lives. Eight years earlier, Elizabeth’s cousin Ann reluctantly broke off her relationship with Joe due to family pressure. Ann always regretted that decision and now fears that it is too late for her and Joe–especially after she becomes the main suspect.

In Murder Most Persuasive, a clever and entertaining story with echoes of Jane Austen’s Persuasion, Elizabeth tries to not only match wits against a killer who’s had an eight year head-start, but to also try her hand at matchmaking.

I admit, Persuasion isn’t my favorite Jane Austen novel, and listening to it while reading Murder Most Persuasive confirmed that. Still, I’m glad I revisited it, because I would have missed most of the Austen references in this book, and then I would have missed out on much of the fun.

I haven’t read any of the previous books in the Elizabeth Parker series, but that didn’t present any problems here.

The characters are lively and well-drawn. I suspect there is a little more depth if you watch them from book to book, but I enjoyed them as presented. I particularly enjoyed Elizabeth, as she struggled with a job she didn’t love and a sister she loved but didn’t always like (with good reason!).

The mystery was reasonably complex and well presented. I figured out the murderer fairly early on, but there really was some luck involved in that guess, and I did have my doubts as the story moved along.

And (as I mentioned above) the Austen references were lots of fun! The book never tries to be a retelling of Persuasion, so there isn’t any worry about getting the details wrong. It simply is a story with amusing references and parallels.

Mystery loving Austen fans should check out this series.

Kaye Publicity sent me a copy of this Murder Most Persuasive for review.  Thank you!

 

 
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Posted by on September 15, 2011 in books, reviews

 

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BBAW: Book Blogger Inteview

Book Blogger Appreciation WeekIntroducing Nishita from Nishita’s Rants and Raves!

I’m happy to have been given Nishita as my interview partner.  I’ve asked her some questions about her blog and her reading.  She asked me some in return– you can see my answers on her blog.

Here’s what she had to say:

1)  Tell me about your blog.
My blog is primarily a book blog, but it’s not ‘only’ a book blog. I am too lazy to maintain multiple blogs, so I do post some amount of personal stuff. I also post about other things that excite my interest – travel, shopping, fun events, basically anything is grist for my blog.
2) How did you get started blogging?
My blog started out as a personal blog where I wanted to document my regular day to day life and events – a sort of online diary.
Once I started, I realized that:
1. I felt uncomfortable putting quite a bit of my thoughts and activities on paper. Nothing to do with the online privacy issue, it just felt like I was rambling and incoherent and sometimes my thoughts were best left as thoughts…I don’t know if that makes sense, but it was what I felt.
2. Most of my blog posts started dealing with books, so my blog sort of just evolved in that direction. It was a very slow evolution though. I lead a full life juggling work + family + hobbies/personal life + blog, and a lot of times, my blog ends up as the last priority.
3) What is your favorite part of blogging?
I love experimenting with my blog so that it reflects my personality. I play around with my blog appearance quite a lot, I also love the various online friends I’ve made through blogging. Very few of my real life friends are into books, so it is a lovely forum to discuss stuff I enjoy with other bibliophiles.
4) What’s your favorite book you’ve read in the past year?
I think I loved ” The Story of Edgar Sawtelle” by David Wroblewski the best.
5) Is there a book (already out or coming out soon) that you are really looking forward to reading?
I am looking forward to Christopher Paolini’s next book “Inheritance”. I love Fantasy, and I am curious to see how this series is going to end. I am also looking forward to reading “Syren” and “Darke” by Angie Sage – the 5th and 6th books in the Septimus Heap series, which is my favorite (almost comes close to the Harry Potter series).  Although the book has been out for some time now, I want to wait for some time and really savor them.

Thank you, Nishita! Everyone, be sure to check out Nishita’s Rants and Raves– I’ll certainly be returning.

Once you’ve checked out her blog, go to the BBAW site and see the other Book Blogger Interviews

 
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Posted by on September 12, 2011 in blogging

 

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Book Blogger Appeciation Week

Book Blogger Appreciation Week
Today marks the beginning of Book Blogger Appreciation Week!  This week, I’m going to attempt to keep up with my normal posts and add the BBAW themed ones as well.

I’m just starting out, and I’m behind already, so I’ll suggest you appreciate the community of book bloggers by going to the Linky at http://bookbloggerappreciationweek.com/2011/09/welcome-to-bbaw-2011/ and picking out some blogs you’ve never read before, seeing what they have to say about the community, and leaving some comments!

I’ll be back tomorrow with an interview of a new to me book blogger, so check back to see who it is.

 

 

 
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Posted by on September 12, 2011 in blogging

 

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Review: Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet by Jamie Ford (with Audiobook and Book Club notes)

Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and SweetMy rating: 4.5 of 5 stars

What a beautiful love story!

Synopsis via Audible.com:

In the opening pages of Jamie Ford’s stunning debut, Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet, Henry Lee comes upon a crowd gathered outside the Panama Hotel, once the gateway to Seattle’s Japantown. It has been boarded up for decades, but now the new owner has made an incredible discovery: the belongings of Japanese families, left when they were rounded up and sent to internment camps during World War II. As Henry looks on, the owner opens a Japanese parasol.

This simple act takes old Henry Lee back to the 1940s, at the height of the war, when young Henry’s world is a jumble of confusion and excitement, and to his father, who is obsessed with the war in China and having Henry grow up American. While scholarshipping at the exclusive Rainier Elementary, where the white kids ignore him, Henry meets Keiko Okabe, a young Japanese American student. Amid the chaos of blackouts, curfews, and FBI raids, Henry and Keiko forge a bond of friendship and innocent love that transcends the long-standing prejudices of their Old World ancestors. And after Keiko and her family are swept up in the evacuations to the internment camps, she and Henry are left only with the hope that the war will end, and that their promise to each other will be kept.

Forty years later, Henry Lee is certain that the parasol belonged to Keiko. In the hotel’s dark dusty basement he begins looking for signs of the Okabe family’s belongings and for a long-lost object whose value he cannot begin to measure. Now a widower, Henry is still trying to find his voice, words that might explain the actions of his nationalistic father; words that might bridge the gap between him and his modern, Chinese American son; words that might help him confront the choices he made many years ago.

Henry was a boy torn between the Chinese world of his parents, and the American world he was living in. His parents said they wanted him to be American, but none of them really understood what that meant, or what effect this would have on their relationship.

Through Henry’s relationship with Keiko, the reader learns more about who Henry really is, even at that young age, but also gets a portrait of the complexity of living at that time– the tensions between white and Asians, but also between those of Chinese and Japanese ancestry.

I particularly liked the different ways that we saw Henry– As a young boy, as he grows up tremendously over the course of several years, as an older adult, but also through the eyes of his adult son, and through his actions towards others, particularly his friends.

The contrast between how his adult son sees him and how he sees himself was particularly enlightening, illustrating how he continued through his life to be torn between America and his father’s world of China.

The lengths that young Henry went to in order to try to preserve his link with Keiko (and the naivete displayed in his plans) were touching. Everything that he lost during this time (and how it compared to all that Keiko lost) was thought provoking.

Most of all, the writing was always compelling, truly delivering Henry’s story to the reader.

Book Club Notes

My Book Club M met over Chinese Food to talk about Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet. I think we all enjoyed the book, although (as usual) some more than others (I was towards the top of the “loved it” scale).

We had a good discussion, ranging from the character and how they were presented, the era and the challenges (both the obvious and the subtle); comparisons with other books about WWII and the Japanese Internment in particular.   It was a solid conversation, if not a standout for the group, and I’d recommend the book for other clubs.

Audio Notes

Sound Bytes @ Devourer of Books

For more audiobook reviews, check out Sound Bytes

Narrator: Feodor Chin was unobtrusive in his delivery of this book, allowing the author’s words to come to the forefront.  He dealt well with Henry’s parents Chinese accent, emphasizing the differences in the generations.   His narration was a wonderful choice for this book.

Audio Production: No issues, no extras.

Print vs. Audio:  This book worked well in audio, but I suspect it would be wonderful in print as well.  Pick the format that is most convenient for you.

For more audiobook reviews, check out Sound Bytes.

 
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Posted by on September 9, 2011 in Book Club, M, books, reviews

 

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Review: Goodie One Shoes by Roz Siegel

My rating:3.5 stars

Overall I enjoyed the story and the characters in this unusual mystery.

Summary via GoodieOneShoes.com:

A Jimmy Choo Sandal. A Manolo Blahnik mule; a Sergio Rossi slide, a Prada sliver-heeled boot. As magic as Cinderella’s glass slipper. Even when they don’t fit, they can determine your life—or end it. Emily knows these things because she owns a discount shoe store on the colorful Upper West Side of Manhattan—Emily’s Place a neighborhood hangout for shoe lovers, where customers could find a sympathetic ear, a hot cup of coffee and the perfect shoe. Unfortunately, someone has decided that a sexy stiletto-heeled shoe is an excellent murder weapon. A member of the Emily’s Place “family”—the staff of women who run the store and love the shoes in it—is murdered with a red Jimmy Choo high-heeled shoe—sharp as an ice pick, the spiked heel is embedded in her head. Emily is still reeling from the shock of her friend’s murder when a bag is shoved through her mail slot containing the mate to the shoe that was the murder weapon. Emily realizes that her store and everyone connected to it is a target and that a psycho killer is stalking them all. In fact the killer seems to particularly want Emily to suffer. She insists on working with the detective assigned to the case, Paul Murphy to find the killer—and she will do whatever it takes. It’s personal.

I expected chick lit meets mystery, and certainly aspects of both were present in the book. Overall, it was heavier on the mystery and lighter on the chick lit. In fact, I’d call this more of a big city cozy!

Emily was a much more mature (in all senses of the word) adult than is usually implied by the term “chick”, which I appreciated.  This isn’t unusual for the lead character in a cozy. The community around her shoe store was a very big city crowd, but still had the feeling of the “everybody knows each other” environment in a cozy mystery. It was a bit grittier than a cozy, but that fit with the setting, and it worked for me.

I liked Emily, and I enjoyed the mystery component, but I did have some issues with the book– not major ones, luckily. The secondary characters were interesting, but felt a bit forced at times. The writing felt a bit clunky at times, and I didn’t get as immersed in the story as I would have liked and expected.

Overall, I enjoyed it, and would pick up another book by this author.

I received a copy of this book free for review purposes.

 
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Posted by on September 7, 2011 in books, reviews

 

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August Wrap Up

First, I want to mention that I have temporarily stopped accepting review books and tour stops.  I won’t reject unsolicited books that appear on my doorstep, but I’m trying hard to back off accepting commitments.

I’d originally been thinking this would be through December.  Now I’m thinking I’ll accept a few commitments for November and December just to keep me moving!

My mailbox is sad, and my Mailbox Monday posts (or lack thereof) reflect this, but I think it will be good to catch up a little.

So, on to books read in August:

Paper Books

  1. Murder Most Persuasive (Elizabeth Parker Mystery #3) by Tracy Kiely
  2. The Revealers by Doug Wilhelm 
  3. Devotion: A Memoir by Dani Shapiro
  4. The Urban Fantasy Anthology by Peter S. Beagle (Editor), Joe R. Lansdale (Editor)
  5. Domestic Violets by Matthew Norman 
  6. Goodie One Shoes by Roz Siegel 
  7. Money Can’t Buy Love by Connie Briscoe 
  8. How I Made It to Eighteen: A Mostly True Story by Tracy White

Audio Books

  1. Her Royal Spyness (Her Royal Spyness Mysteries #1) by Rhys Bowen
  2. Persuasion by Jane Austen
  3. Kitty Takes a Holiday (Kitty Norville #3) by Carrie Vaughn
  4. Storm Front (The Dresden Files #1) by Jim Butcher 
  5. To Say Nothing of the Dog: Or How We Found the Bishop’s Bird Stump at Last by Connie Willis
  6. We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson
  7. Agent to the Stars by John Scalzi
  8. Chasing Fire by Nora Roberts

I was shocked to discover how many books I’d read, and even more than that, how many reviews I wrote.  I’ve been sick for going on 3 weeks now, and I was really knocked out for the first two.  I must have really been on fire for the first half of the month– 16 books read, 11 reviews written.  I made some real progress on catching up my review backlog as well!

So, my reading totals for the year stand at 122 books read: 51 paper books, 58 audio books, 11 Nook books,  1 other e-book, and 1 book in multiple formats.

My favorite book of the month would be Domestic Violets, with an honorable mention to my re-listen to a favorite, To Say Nothing of the Dog.

Plans going forward? Book club books, getting caught up, more books I read simply because I want to.  I’m really planning to get back to an audiobook review every Friday, and one or two print book reviews each week.

How was your August?  What are your September reading plans?

 
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Posted by on September 4, 2011 in books, summary

 

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