I enjoyed this book. It was recommended to me by a librarian. Not a large book, very easy read. It's about a rich, sophisticated couple who solve mysteries between drinks and parties. It's an older book and takes place during Prohibitation. (seems like there is always alcohol available though) I enjoyed it enough that I am planning on getting the movie to watch. I think it is an older black and white film.
Sunday, June 29, 2008
The Sweet Potato Queens' Book of Love
You will either hate it or love it. I laugh out loud over it. These are real women down south. They even have a website. www.sweetpotatoqueens.com. The women have interesting ideas about love, marriage, and children. They have a huge following. There is a St. Paddy's Day Parade down south and they march every year. They wear around a size 28 and stuff the top and bottom and take in the waist. They say that satisfies everyone. The men who like big chests and the men who like big behinds.
There are only so many Queens allowed, then there are the Wannabes, (the women who are waiting in line, in case a Queen dies or moves away) then there are the Wannabe Wannabe's, (the Wannabes have their own following) the men in their lives are called Spud Studs, and their children are called Tater Tots. There are several different books, they even have a cookbook. I do highly reccomend the ladies. I just finished reading it for the 2nd time and still laughed outloud. (Kevin says he is afraid of them)
Saturday, June 28, 2008
Blood Noir
I have read all of the books in the Anita Blake series. This one is the latest. Not her best. The only thing that kept me reading was the tiny bit of story line mixed in with all the sex. The first books in the series are really good. A story line that is not the norm. About a woman who when she was a child raised her pet from the dead. (It wasn't pleasant) It's about a time when vampires are citizens with rights, there are werepeople, (wereswans, wererats, werebears, etc..) and she becomes a Federal Marshal who has to keep them all in line. She is also a Necromancer. She raises people from the dead so their family, lawyers, etc. can ask them questions that need answering and then she puts them back to death. Really fun books. BUT.... the last couple have been more about sex than good story line. I would recommend the first ones, but I can't say I would recommend the last 2.
Friday, June 27, 2008
There's No Place Like Here
I have a problem. Besides being unable to only read one of a series, if I read something by an author that I enjoy, I then begin a horrible binge in which I read EVERYTHING that they have ever written. And if they have the audacity to publish after that, I usually can't even bring myself to look at it.
Cecelia Ahern is different because I got in on the ground floor, so to speak. I read "P.S. I Love You" when it was first published in the U.S. and was ridiculously impressed at how well it was written considering the age of the author. (She was only 21 at the time.) I also loved its not so tidy ending. It's tidy enough to leave me satisfied, but not so tidy that I wanted to hurl.
After that was "Rosie Dunn" which I noticed has also been publish under the titles "Love, Rosie" and "Where the Rainbow Ends". I have no explanation for that. Loved that one, too.
Taking a departure from reality, Ahern has written "If You Could See Me Now" and "There's No Place Like Here" which are still about women with issues, but in this case there is something "mystical" to help the women work through them. I think "There's No Place Like Here" was closer to the mark than "If You Could See Me Now".
"There's No Place Like Here" is the story of a woman who has been literally obsessed with finding things since a neighborhood girl disappeared 20 years ago. She starts off with the police, but can't stand to ever end a case, so she eventually opens up a missing persons agency. Then she goes missing from our world to find herself in a land where all missing things go. Every sock from the dryer, every piece of lost luggage, and many of the missing people she's been searching for her entire professional life. The reader is left to determine whether it really happens or not, but it's an enjoyable story to read and as per Ms. Ahern's usual, not too sickeningly tidy in it's wrap up.
Cecelia Ahern is different because I got in on the ground floor, so to speak. I read "P.S. I Love You" when it was first published in the U.S. and was ridiculously impressed at how well it was written considering the age of the author. (She was only 21 at the time.) I also loved its not so tidy ending. It's tidy enough to leave me satisfied, but not so tidy that I wanted to hurl.
After that was "Rosie Dunn" which I noticed has also been publish under the titles "Love, Rosie" and "Where the Rainbow Ends". I have no explanation for that. Loved that one, too.
Taking a departure from reality, Ahern has written "If You Could See Me Now" and "There's No Place Like Here" which are still about women with issues, but in this case there is something "mystical" to help the women work through them. I think "There's No Place Like Here" was closer to the mark than "If You Could See Me Now".
"There's No Place Like Here" is the story of a woman who has been literally obsessed with finding things since a neighborhood girl disappeared 20 years ago. She starts off with the police, but can't stand to ever end a case, so she eventually opens up a missing persons agency. Then she goes missing from our world to find herself in a land where all missing things go. Every sock from the dryer, every piece of lost luggage, and many of the missing people she's been searching for her entire professional life. The reader is left to determine whether it really happens or not, but it's an enjoyable story to read and as per Ms. Ahern's usual, not too sickeningly tidy in it's wrap up.
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Aunt Dimity: Vampire Hunter
I discovered the Aunt Dimity books shortly after we moved to Ohio. They helped me smile through that first sunless winter and are just as fun in the sunny summertime. They are about a divorced and recently orphaned woman from Chicago, named Lori, who is endowed with a rather strange bequest from someone who she grew up thinking was a fictional character. Aunt Dimity had been the name of her favorite childhood heroine in all the stories her mother had told her. In actuality, Dimity was her mother's best friend from England. Dimity leaves Lori, among other things, an empty journal. Through this journal she and Lori have chats from the great beyond.
It's quirky, but lovable. There are quite a few books in the series, and it really does help to read them in order...except for the first two. You could read the 2nd one first. Anyway, they hop back and forth between the U.S. and the U.K. and always feature a recipe. Uncle Tom's butterscotch brownies are like crack as far as I'm concerned. LOVE them. This book featured "Jammie Biscuits" which I fully intend to make after we go berry picking. Mmmmmmm....
These books are quick and light without making you feel less intelligent for having spent your time with them.
It's quirky, but lovable. There are quite a few books in the series, and it really does help to read them in order...except for the first two. You could read the 2nd one first. Anyway, they hop back and forth between the U.S. and the U.K. and always feature a recipe. Uncle Tom's butterscotch brownies are like crack as far as I'm concerned. LOVE them. This book featured "Jammie Biscuits" which I fully intend to make after we go berry picking. Mmmmmmm....
These books are quick and light without making you feel less intelligent for having spent your time with them.
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
In Search of Mockingbird
This is the story of a 16 year old girl who has one connection to her mother; an old copy of "To Kill a Mockingbird". It's the story of how this girl takes the book and her birthday money and sets out on an journey to find the reclusive author, Harper Lee.
This story is more about the journey and all the characters she meets on the Greyhound bus than it is about the actual destination. But it is well written and a poignant story of a daughter/sister/friend trying to figure out life.
I haven't read "To Kill a Mockingbird" since sometime in the last century. While this story references the book quite a bit, you can still get what's happening even if you're not intimately familiar with it.
This story is more about the journey and all the characters she meets on the Greyhound bus than it is about the actual destination. But it is well written and a poignant story of a daughter/sister/friend trying to figure out life.
I haven't read "To Kill a Mockingbird" since sometime in the last century. While this story references the book quite a bit, you can still get what's happening even if you're not intimately familiar with it.
Comfort Food
I read The Friday Night Knitting Club (a previous book by the same author) while I was training for the half marathon. I did a lot of reading on the treadmill. Anyway, one Saturday while on the treadmill somewhere around mile 6, I had tears streaming down my face. I actually cared about the myriad of characters in the story. I was able to shut of my brain to all the silly little implausibilities of the story and get involved enough that I cried.
This book? No tears. It felt like Jacobs tried following a once successful recipe, but it didn't turn out quite as well as the first one. I didn't even feel connected to the food. And I love food and books about food! Food can make a whole story for me! But here, it felt like she was describing pretty pictures of food and not the real thing.
I won't say it's a waste of time, but it's not a book I will remember with fondness.
This book? No tears. It felt like Jacobs tried following a once successful recipe, but it didn't turn out quite as well as the first one. I didn't even feel connected to the food. And I love food and books about food! Food can make a whole story for me! But here, it felt like she was describing pretty pictures of food and not the real thing.
I won't say it's a waste of time, but it's not a book I will remember with fondness.
Monday, June 23, 2008
Children of God
I FINALLY READ IT!!!!! I know that most of you have already read this book, but I just got around to reading it. I either always checked out The Sparrow by mistake(I checked that book out 2 times thinking it was the one I hadn't read) or it wasn't at the library when I looked for it. (I know there is such a thing called reserving, but my mind didn't go there at the time) Anyway I fell like I have completed something left undone. Now I just have to read the These are my words series. NOT ENOUGH TIME!!! Also look I figured out how to put the pictures of the books up. (I just hope I'm not doing anything illegal.)
If you havn't guessed by now, my kids stay hungry, my house dirty, and clothes unwashed. I have been reading a little too much. I also have read "In the Courts of the Crimson Kings" by S. M. Stirling and "Many Bloody Returns" a collection of short stories.
If you havn't guessed by now, my kids stay hungry, my house dirty, and clothes unwashed. I have been reading a little too much. I also have read "In the Courts of the Crimson Kings" by S. M. Stirling and "Many Bloody Returns" a collection of short stories.
Devil Who Tamed Her
Shakespeare's Landlord
Saturday, June 21, 2008
(A Whopper)-Forever Amber by Kathleen Winsor
See, I find that I too can't resist a big, long, epic book--so when I saw this on the shelves I knew it had to come home with me. Is it good? Weeeeellll, it isn't a runoutandgetit kinda book. The characters have very little depth, and there is a lot of repetition in the plot. On the other hand, it was easy to read (all 900+ pages) in a summer book sort of way.
This was heavily censored (supposedly only a fifth of its original size; Forever Amber was written in first half of 20th century during a somewhat more conservative time [if that is possible]), yet it still deliver lots of immoral behavior (always fun) and delicious descriptions of 17th century clothes and decor, with little social tidbit facts thrown in.
Also, there is a movie based on the novel, made in 1947.
Thursday, June 19, 2008
From Dead to Worse
I must admit I am a Charlaine Harris junkie. (The Dead Series) It truly is like potato chips for me. Most of you have heard me talk of the Sookie Stackhouse books. (You know Elvis as Bubba) Well this is the 8th in the series. Fun books.
Warning: R rated, not so much this one, but in general.
Warning: R rated, not so much this one, but in general.
Outlander
Wow. I just finished reading this wonderful first book in a (deliciously) long series by Diana Gabaldon. Many of the broads have already read this book as they were the ones who insisted that I try it. It was 850 pages of pure reading happiness. I am one who adores a long, good book. And I can be brought to the very edge of panting with desire if there is a whole series of long, good books. So you may never see me again for the rest of the summer as I chew my way through these babies. I would recommend them to any and all. Do not fear the length. Though the length will play havoc on my attempt to read 10 books for my summer reading list at the library. Oh, heck with it! I will just have to sacrifice myself to the series (and give the kids p.b. & j.'s for the rest of the summer) in order to read them all and meet my goal. Gotta have the tote bag. I just gotta!
Thursday, June 5, 2008
Treasure Island
This was our book club's selection from last month.
I didn't love it. It was written as an adventure book for boys. It's still an adventure book for boys. My oldest son loved it. I decided it was worth reading because it launched a whole new genre of pirate themed stories. And now I can be done and never read it again...unless I have to...or if my boys want me to read it to them.
Maybe they'd just be content with the Muppet version.
Monday, June 2, 2008
Young Adult Fantasy...it's ok to look.
Here's my current library haul...and a few favorites:
Artemis Fowl (read them all, loved them all...the graphic novel is also cute)
His Dark Materials (just finished Golden Compass, 'coz I want to watch the movie - well done)
Land of Elyon (read the Dark Hills Divide - book one; cute, very fast read, talking animals)
Coraline by Neil Gaiman (Through the Looking Glass...shops at Hot Topic!)
Stardust - not sure if it qualifies as YA, but the movie was kinda marketed that way. Very entertaining...the book - haven't seen the movie yet.
That's all I've finished for now...I've also borrowed the Inheart/Inkspell...Cornelia Funke series and Theif Lord and Dragon Rider of hers. Should be fun.
Artemis Fowl (read them all, loved them all...the graphic novel is also cute)
His Dark Materials (just finished Golden Compass, 'coz I want to watch the movie - well done)
Land of Elyon (read the Dark Hills Divide - book one; cute, very fast read, talking animals)
Coraline by Neil Gaiman (Through the Looking Glass...shops at Hot Topic!)
Stardust - not sure if it qualifies as YA, but the movie was kinda marketed that way. Very entertaining...the book - haven't seen the movie yet.
That's all I've finished for now...I've also borrowed the Inheart/Inkspell...Cornelia Funke series and Theif Lord and Dragon Rider of hers. Should be fun.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)