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Review: The House on Olive Street by Robyn Carr

The House on Olive StreetMy rating: 4.5 of 5 stars

This was my first Robyn Carr book, but it won’t be my last.

This is grown up chick lit– fiction that looks at four women, each at a crossroads in her life,drawn together by the unexpected death of the fifth member of their group.

Elly is a college professor. She’s now involved in a relationship that she’s not willing to share with the world (including her friends) because it doesn’t fit with her image of herself.

Beth writes murder mysteries, but she is very shy in her everyday life. Part of this shyness is a need to hide the problems in her marriage– problems that sometimes leave physical signs.

Barbara Ann works hard as a writer of romance novels, but can’t quite make it to the next level of success. She is also mom to young men, and it often seems like she’s mom to her husband as well. The effort of caring for these adults (or close to it) that don’t in any way appreciate it finally gets too much for her.

Sable is a highly successful author, but she’s built a shell around herself, one based on a whole new identity she created in an effort to escape her past, a past that is catching up to her.

I loved meeting all four of these women. They all became very real to me, even if their lives and problems ranged from ones that I see everyday to ones I can only stretch my mind to imagine.

Each woman was a mixture of strength and weaknesses. Their relationships were similar– the group had been held together by Gabby, and when she was gone, they didn’t always know how to deal with one another.

Each woman makes a personal journey over the course of the book. Each of them touched me, and left me wishing I’d see them again.

I received an electronic copy of this book from Harlequin for review purposes.  Thank you for this opportunity!

 
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Posted by on November 16, 2010 in books, reviews

 

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Review: The Absolute Value of -1 by Steve Brezenoff

The Absolute Value of -1My rating: 3.5 of 5 stars

I have to start by saying that I picked up this book because of its name.  As a math nerd, I love it!

Summary via Goodreads.com:

The absolute value of any number, positive or negative, is its distance from zero: |-1| = 1

Noah, Lily, and Simon have been a trio forever. But as they enter high school, their relationships shift and their world starts to fall apart. Privately, each is dealing with a family crisis—divorce, abuse, and a parent’s illness. Yet as they try to escape the pain and reach out for the connections they once counted on, they slip—like soap in a shower. Noah’s got it bad for Lily, but he knows too well Lily sees only Simon. Simon is indifferent, suddenly inscrutable to his friends. All stand alone in their heartache and grief.

In his luminous YA novel, Steve Brezenoff explores the changing value of relationships as the characters realize that the distances between them are far greater than they knew.

This book isn’t a flavor of YA that I normally read for myself, and it isn’t one that I’d be looking at to recommend to my 12 year old daughter.  It’s hard to figure out what perspective I should be looking at it from– that of an adult reading for pleasure?  An adult reading for perspective on teens? Whether I think a teen would enjoy it?  Whether I’d suggest it to teens?

This book got off to a slow start for me. I found Lily interesting in a fairly abstract way, but I never found her or her story compelling.  I wanted to like her, and her interest in math called to me, and the way she pursued her friend, hoping to move to a different relationship was certainly familiar from many years ago.  Maybe those years are just too long past…

It really picked up for me when the book switched viewpoints, and I started to see Noah’s perspective on some of the same events. If anything, Noah is a less interesting character, but the shift really pulled me in.

Then I got to Simon’s section. I hadn’t been interested in him either, but once I saw his perspective, and the parts of his story that he didn’t share with his friends, this was the best part of the book.

His story was also the most touching and the most real, since he was dealing with significant personal issues. He could have (and often did) hide from them, but in the end, they found him and he faced them.

I do wish that the book had completed the circle and returned to Lily’s point of view. I think I would have appreciated her more at that point.

All three characters were fairly self centered teens. Personally, I didn’t like the casual smoking and drugs in the book. I’m not saying it was unrealistic or shouldn’t be there, but that did cut down on the personal appeal of the book.  Other than that, the darker feel actually did work for me– I’m not looking for all sweetness and light.

In the end, I found the book interesting and well executed. I think the slower first part was necessary to get to the depth of the last section..  I think a younger (teen or close to it) reader would have an easier time relating to the characters.  On the other hand, I think there’s more to see in the parallel stories than I caught in my rather drawn out reading.

Other reviews:

Thanks to the publisher, I was able to download this book from NetGalley.com for review.

 
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Posted by on October 5, 2010 in books, reviews

 

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Mailbox Monday

My Mailbox looks a little like this one.Mailbox Monday is a weekly post where I talk about the books that have arrived in my house over the last week.

Marcia at The Printed Page hosts the Mailbox Monday Blog Tour.  This month’s  home is Bermudaonion’s Weblog.

Sniff, sniff.  My mailbox was empty this week.

That isn’t to say I don’t have any new reading material.  My Nook has several new books on it, all for free!

If you have a Nook, you should follow the B&N Unbound blog (I do this via facebook).  There are all sorts of special deals there, including Free Book Fridays.

I downloaded

The Pawn (Patrick Bowers Files Series #1) by Steven James. I think this series looks interesting, but I’m not sure I would have taken the chance on it without this offer.

Special Agent Patrick Bowers never met a killer he couldn’t catch.

Until now.

Called to North Carolina to consult on the case of an area serial killer, Bowers finds himself caught in a deadly game of cat and mouse. Cunning and lethal, the killer is always one step ahead of the law, and he’s about to strike again. It will take all of Bowers’s instincts and training to stop the man who calls himself the Illusionist.

There were also some classic ebooks (always free) highlighted, and from these, I downloaded:

I don’t know when I’ll read (or reread) these, but I thought if nothing else, my daughter might enjoy them.

What’s new on your shelves, physical  or virtual?

 
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Posted by on September 6, 2010 in books, meme

 

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Review: Chosen by Chandra Hoffman

ChosenMy rating: 3.5 of 5 stars

There was so much I liked about this book, but the combination of characters just got to be too much at times.

From the HarperCollins website:

It all begins with a fantasy: the caseworker in her “signing paperwork” charcoal suit standing alongside beaming parents cradling their adopted newborn, set against a fluorescent-lit delivery-room backdrop. It’s this blissful picture that keeps Chloe Pinter, director of the Chosen Child’s domestic-adoption program, happy while juggling the high demands of her boss and the incessant needs of both adoptive and biological parents.

But the very job that offers her refuge from her turbulent personal life and Portland’s winter rains soon becomes a battleground involving three very different couples: the Novas, well-off college sweethearts who suffered fertility problems but are now expecting their own baby; the McAdoos, a wealthy husband and desperate wife for whom adoption is a last chance; and Jason and Penny, an impoverished couple who have nothing—except the baby everyone wants. When a child goes missing, dreams dissolve into nightmares, and everyone is forced to examine what he or she really wants and where it all went wrong.

Told from alternating points of view, Chosen reveals the desperate nature of desire across social backgrounds and how far people will go to get the one thing they think will be the answer.

There was some interesting insight and reflection on the world of domestic infant adoption, and I really liked that we had the perspectives of birth parents, adoptive parents and a social worker.

The problem I had with this book was that the characters were all a little larger than life. I believe that there are people in real life like each and every person in this book, but it felt a little crowded in there with all of these strong personalities.

One birth mother is an angelically sweet woman, relinquishing her baby so she can better take care of her toddler. The other is a conflicted young woman, giving into pressure from her scum-ball of a boyfriend to give up their baby.

The adoptive mother to be is an obsessed woman who spends all her time on Internet adoption sites, the adoptive father a workaholic absent from most of the story.

I think that Chloe was supposed to be a person the reader could identify with, but her engagement to an unemployed extreme sports aficionado and her attraction to one of her ex-clients pushed her over the edge for me.

The issues they all encounter are real, and the stories are interesting. I think I would have liked it better if it was a little less dramatic, but I still felt it was worth reading.  I think this could make for interesting book club discussion.

Nicole at Linus’s Blanket also reviewed The Chosen, it worked better for her than it did for me.

I picked up this book (or rather a card that allowed me to download this book to my Nook) from the publisher at BEA.  Thank you to Harper Collins.

 
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Posted by on August 31, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

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Review: The Koala of Death by Betty Webb

The Koala of DeathMy rating: 4 of 5 stars

OK, what a fantastic title.

From the Poisoned Pen website:

When zoo keeper Theodora “Teddy” Bentley fishes the body of Koala Kate out of Gunn Landing Harbor, she discovers that her fellow zoo keeper didn’t drown; she was strangled. The clues to Koala Kate’s killer implicate other animal keepers at the Gunn Zoo, including Outback Bill, marsupial keeper and Kate’s Aussie ex-boyfriend; and Robin Chase, the big cat keeper who’s got it in for Teddy. Also displaying suspicious behavior are several “liveaboarders” at the harbor; Speaks-To-Souls, a shady “animal psychic”; and even Caro, Teddy’s much-married, ex-beauty queen mother. But murderers aren’t all Teddy has to worry about. Her embezzling father is still on the run from the Feds, and the motor on the Merilee, her beloved houseboat is failing. To pay for the repairs, Teddy agrees to appear on a weekly live television broadcast featuring misbehaving animals that range from Wanchu, a cuddly koala, to Abim, a panicky wallaby – and all hell breaks loose in the TV studio. To add to Teddy’s woes, the killer zeroes in on her with near-fatal results. “The Koala of Death” brings a return to Gunn Zoo and the social-climbing humans and eccentric animals that made the prize-winning “The Anteater of Death” so popular. Readers will enjoy this behind-the-scenes peek at zoo life, and learn that poor little rich girls like Teddy lead much more complicated lives that they’d ever imagine – especially when they’re tracking killers.

Who knew that zoo mysteries were a thing? This is the second one I’ve read in the last month. I liked Did Not Survive, but I really enjoyed this one.

It’s also a cozy mystery, where a random person (in this case, Teddy, a zookeeper)gets involved with a murder investigation, often by being the one to discover the body (as is the case here).

What I really like about this book is (in spite of multiple dead bodies) how upbeat it was. The koala was cuddly, the baby anteater was cute, Teddy’s mother’s crazy antics were motivated by affection.

This was the second book in the series, but this didn’t cause any problems for me.  There were no plot issues, I was able to connect with the characters without a problem.  I do know how the first book ended, but I can live with that.

If I think about it, the book is fairly traditional cozy. The characters and setting are fresh enough to make it work. I really enjoyed this one, and am looking forward to reading more.

I requested The Koala of Death for review through NetGalley.  I read an electronic copy on my Nook. Thank you to Poisoned Pen Press for granting my request.

 
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Posted by on July 30, 2010 in books, reviews

 

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Review: Did Not Survive by Ann Littlewood

Did Not SurviveMy rating: 3.5 of 5 stars

I’ve got to stop picking up series in the middle if I’m going to review them. I enjoyed Did Not Survive, but I have this niggling feeling that I would have liked it even more if I’d read the previous book first.

From the Poisoned Pen Press website:

Iris Oakley, pregnant and still recovering from her husband’s murder, wants only to carry on as a keeper at Finley Memorial Zoo in Vancouver, Washington. But she is confronted by a terrifying situation: alone and with no elephant expertise, she must rescue her boss, Kevin Wallace, from being mauled by a zoo elephant. Though she gets him to safety, he dies of his injuries. No one understands why reliable old Damrey attacked the foreman, and Iris inadvertently misdirects the investigation. As zoo staff descend into anxiety and animosity, the welfare of the animals is threatened, as well as the lives of keepers. Rattled coworkers nominate Iris to find out what’s going on. She finds a surprising number of motives to kill the foreman, but Damrey, the elephant, doesn’t have one. Despite the distraction of trying to construct her new life as a single mother, Iris discovers that the elephant keepers are locked in a bitter feud, the new veterinarian is keeping secrets, and an old flame still hates Wallace. New-born clouded leopard cubs cheer up the troubled staff, but even that has its dark side. Adding to the chaos, animal rights activists are picketing the zoo. They want the elephants sent to a sanctuary, but is that a better option for them than the improved exhibit that is on the drawing board? Why isn’t that exhibit under construction as planned? A new foreman shows up with alarming ideas, the police keep dropping by, and animals are disappearing into thin air…

This is a cozy mystery set in a zoo. The primary characters are all employees or residents (the elephants play a major role in the action). To me, the zoo was an unusual and entertaining setting, and I enjoyed the behind the scenes look– particularly at the new baby cloud leopards.

I called this book a cozy, but I’m not entirely sure that is accurate. This book is a little grimmer than I’d usually expect for that genre. It isn’t gory, but it is fairly realistic about the issues of day to day life at a zoo.

The mystery itself was interesting.  It was one where I didn’t even bother trying to figure out Who Dunnit, although I think the information you needed was there if you like to play along.

As is usually the case for me in a cozy, the strength of the book is in the characters. I felt I got to know Iris (the protagonist) fairly well. She’s a zoo-keeper, working with the birds because her pregnancy means the big cats she loves are off limits.  She’s facing the reality of life as a single mother, a situation she didn’t choose.

The book fills us in on the events from the previous book, where her husband was killed by the lions. I wonder if I would have connected with her even more if I’d been there with her.

I didn’t ever really get a good feel for the other characters. That may have been true even if I’d read the first book, but I’m not sure. I kept being told that people were acting out of character, but I didn’t know them well enough to see for myself. The characters worked well enough, but it could have been better if they’d been a bit more real to me.

I might go back and read the first book. I’ll probably pick up the next one!

I requested Did Not Survive for review through NetGalley. Thank you to Poisoned Pen Press for granting my request. Now that I have my Nook and am using it, expect to see NetGalley mentioned here more often!

 
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Posted by on July 28, 2010 in books, reviews

 

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Review: A Kiss at Midnight by Eloisa James

A Kiss at MidnightMy rating: 4 of 5 stars

I enjoyed reading this take on the Cinderella story.

The author describes it as more fairy tale than historical fiction, and that seems right. The story was full of fuzziness of setting and improbable coincidences that really worked because of that tie.

Kate (Cinderella) is the granddaughter of an Earl. Her mother was sickly but very rich, and her very good looking father married for access to that money, but not for love or affection. Her mother died, and her father immediately remarried a woman with a beautiful daughter (Victoria), about 5 years younger than Kate.

Kate finds it necessary to stay around to protect the staff and the tenants on her father’s estate, so her stepmother has a way to convince her to take part in a truly hare-brained scheme to pretend to be Victoria on a trip to see her fiance’s extended family, including a prince!

Yes, there are glass slippers, a ball, a previously unknown godmother (no fairies, though), a midnight escape… There are also fireworks, three silly little dogs, several steaming hot scenes, primary characters with some depth, funny secondary characters…

A very fun read.

I picked up A Kiss at Midnight at Book Expo America for review purposes.  Actually, I didn’t pick up the book itself, I picked up a card that allowed me to download it and transfer it to my Nook once I arrived home.  Very cool!  Thank you to Harper Collins for providing this electronic copy.

 
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Posted by on July 27, 2010 in books, reviews

 

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Book Shots: Cat Nook

My cat has always enjoyed a good book, particularly at bedtime.  He’s sure there are some good ones on my Nook.

To see more of this guy, click on one of the links above for older pictures.  To see more pictures of him with the Nook (including one with my daughter), check out the blog’s new Facebook page.  You can see his summer haircut!

Thank you to my husband Arnold for coming in with his camera when the opportunity presented.  He took a lot of wonderful photos!

 
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Posted by on July 24, 2010 in Book Shot

 

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Review: Saba by Mary Jane

SabaMy rating: 3.5 of 5 stars

This was an interesting book, with some very nice pieces to it.

There wasn’t so much a plot as an arc to the book– we follow Aaron and Erin (husband and wife) through their journey to change their lives.

Saba alternated between their points of view, with a very occasional other person thrown in, usually for comic value. I felt this allowed me to get to know Erin better, but Aaron was simply a very shallow character. I think he was intended to be a person without depth, as opposed to an interesting human with a portrayal that lacked interest. It doesn’t matter, I never really connected with him as a person or a character.

We meet Erin and Aaron at the end of their vacation, a visit to the small island of Saba. They have a perfect day, followed by a perfect night, then return home to their normal lives.

Aaron runs a tanning salon. He likes this job because he gets to ogle pretty women and has lots of time to read on his Kindle.

Erin is a middle school math teacher. She mostly enjoys her classes with the advanced students, but the “Practical Math” classes with the less academically motivated kids are less fulfilling. One student finally drives her to the breaking point, and she retreats home to examine her options.

The option she chooses, and convinces Aaron to try as well, is to move to Saba.

The rest of the book covers their attempts to settle into life on the island. Neither of them adjusts easily, but it’s a chance to grow. They each take a different path, consistent with their personality.

Some parts of Saba show signs of loving craftsmanship, of being written and rewritten until each word is perfect. These are some of the spots where the words pulled me out of my enjoyment of the story. I’m not a person who reads for the words, I want the words to deliver the story for me.

This book was a quick read, and I enjoyed it, primarily for the humor and the character of Erin, as well as for the island of Saba itself.

I bought this book on Smashwords to read on my Nook.

 
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Posted by on July 8, 2010 in books, reviews

 

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Review: The House on Fortune Street by Margot Livesey

The House on Fortune StreetMy rating: 4 of 5 stars

The House on Fortune Street is a book divided into four sections, each telling the story of a different character. These chapters overlap in the events they cover, but each covers enough different ground to not to seem repetitive.

Sean is a writer and struggling academic.  He’s living in the house on Fortune Street with his girlfriend Abigail, who convinced him to leave his wife for her.   He works part time for the theater company that takes up most of her time. Abigail’s best friend Dara lives in the flat downstairs.  She’s a therapist at a women’s clinic.  The fourth player is Dara’s father, Cameron.   He’s a very nice man who tries very hard to overcome his one flaw that some people (including Dara’s mother) find unforgivable.

The book got off to a very slow start for me. I didn’t get the point of Sean’s story at all. He seemed like a loser, largely due to his own choices, unwilling to change the direction of his life (although he goes along with others changing it for him). I didn’t like him, sympathize with him, find him interesting, are understand why we were reading about him.

It picked up quite a bit after that.

Cameron’s story was interesting. He was a generally likable guy, struggling with a problem that in and of itself could make him very unlikable.   The events in this story start much earlier than the previous chapter. Besides letting the reader get to know Cameron (only a very minor character in Sean’s story, but quite an interesting guy) it sets up Dara’s chapter.

Dara and Abigail were both interesting characters, and their chapters are when the book really came to life for me. The two women are contrasts in personality and background. but become close friends in college, then drift apart again. I really appreciated seeing into their thoughts that kept them apart.

Both women were significantly affected by the events in their past.  For Dara, we see those events from Cameron’s point of view.  For Abigail, we see them from her own.  Through their lives, they react and make decisions in a way that makes you wonder how different their lives could have been.

In the end, this was a very satisfying read. It’s worth hanging on past the first section.

Book Club Notes

I read The House on Fortune Street  for my Book Club M.   Four of us met to discuss it.  All of us liked it.  I was the only one with significant reservations about any part of it, although at least one person had some of the same issues with Sean’s section.  We had a good discussion about the characters:  Was the end of Dara’s story believable?  Was Cameron’s flaw forgivable?  Did he ever step over a line?  Was Abigail a supportive friend?  The discussion questions also suggested that each character’s life was connected to that of a well known writer.  Some of these parallels were clear, others less so,  and both ways, they were interesting to discuss.

I’d count The House on Fortune Street as a book club success.

 
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Posted by on July 2, 2010 in Book Club, books, M, reviews

 

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