Married in Seattle
by Debbie Macomber
This book was two novellas in one book. Generally I enjoy Ms. Macomber's stories, which I why I picked this book up. I was in Seattle for a family emergency and really wanted something light and fluffy to read, but this book ended up annoying me more than entertaining and distracting me.
To be fair, I should say the first story in the book as I didn't even attempt to read the second story. I found the story just a little too "Harlequin Romance." The lead female character was overly sensitive to every comment or action by the lead male character. It wasn't long before I was screaming at her inside my head to open her eyes and see what was obvious.
I hope the reason the story was so shallow is because it was written to be a quick read in a book of novellas, and doesn't reflect on Ms. Macomber's future works. This was simply far too contrived.
Saturday, November 10, 2012
Then Came You
Then Came You
by Jennifer Weiner
One of the reasons I write a book blog is because I have a very bad memory. God's honest truth. I am one of those people who could probably read the same book over and over again and still be surprised by the ending... same with movies. Sadly, this comes back to haunt me when I fall so far behind in my blogging and can't really remember a book well enough to review it. Insert heavy sigh here.
Jennifer Weiner is an author that I really enjoy. I can't recall much detail of this story, even after revisiting the synopsis at the Barnes & Noble website. I won't try to bluff my way through a review. I think the next few posts will simply be me trying to update my record of the books I've read without much commentary.
But I'll save you searching for the synopsis. From Barnes & Noble:
by Jennifer Weiner
One of the reasons I write a book blog is because I have a very bad memory. God's honest truth. I am one of those people who could probably read the same book over and over again and still be surprised by the ending... same with movies. Sadly, this comes back to haunt me when I fall so far behind in my blogging and can't really remember a book well enough to review it. Insert heavy sigh here.
Jennifer Weiner is an author that I really enjoy. I can't recall much detail of this story, even after revisiting the synopsis at the Barnes & Noble website. I won't try to bluff my way through a review. I think the next few posts will simply be me trying to update my record of the books I've read without much commentary.
But I'll save you searching for the synopsis. From Barnes & Noble:
AN UNEXPECTED LOVE STORY . . .
Jules Strauss is a Princeton
senior on a full scholarship who plans on selling her “pedigree” eggs to
help save her father from addiction.
Annie Barrow, a struggling
Pennsylvania housewife, thinks that carrying another woman’s child will
help her recover a sense of purpose and will bring in some much-needed
cash.
India Bishop, thirty-eight
(really, forty-three) and recently married to the wealthy Marcus Croft,
yearns for a baby for reasons that have more to do with money than with
love. When her attempts at pregnancy fail, she turns to Jules and Annie
to make her dreams come true.
But each of their plans is thrown
into disarray when Bettina, Marcus’s privileged daughter, becomes
suspicious that her new stepmother is not what she seems . . .
Told with Jennifer Weiner’s trademark wit and sharp observations, Then Came You
is a hilarious, tender, and timely tale that explores themes of class
and entitlement, surrogacy and charity, the rights of a parent and the
measure of a mother.
Sunday, May 6, 2012
The Expected One
The Expected One
Kathleen McGowan
The Expected One is a story of mysticism, secrecy and altered history surrounding the woman Mary Magdalene and her relationship to Christ. I was expecting a book similar to The Davinci Code and in some ways it was.
I'm having a hard time trying to figure out what to write, how to review this book. So instead of trying to summarize it and talk about the writing, I'm just going to write the words I keep saying in my head.
I didn't hate this book. But I didn't love it, either. Some parts of it kept me entertained and called me back for more, and other parts I could have put it down and never picked it up again.
I like the theory behind this story and actually support it myself, that Mary Magdalene was in truth the wife of Jesus and the mother of his children. Mysticism uncovers the hidden gospels written by Mary as only "The Expected One" will have the location of the gospels revealed to her. The Expected One will be a descendant of Mary Magdalene.
This story fizzled at the end when the found gospels are stolen away to Rome and all the characters involved more or less just shrug it off. I found that disappointing. There are 2 more books in this trilogy but I doubt I will get to them.
Three shots of five.
Kathleen McGowan
The Expected One is a story of mysticism, secrecy and altered history surrounding the woman Mary Magdalene and her relationship to Christ. I was expecting a book similar to The Davinci Code and in some ways it was.
I'm having a hard time trying to figure out what to write, how to review this book. So instead of trying to summarize it and talk about the writing, I'm just going to write the words I keep saying in my head.
I didn't hate this book. But I didn't love it, either. Some parts of it kept me entertained and called me back for more, and other parts I could have put it down and never picked it up again.
I like the theory behind this story and actually support it myself, that Mary Magdalene was in truth the wife of Jesus and the mother of his children. Mysticism uncovers the hidden gospels written by Mary as only "The Expected One" will have the location of the gospels revealed to her. The Expected One will be a descendant of Mary Magdalene.
This story fizzled at the end when the found gospels are stolen away to Rome and all the characters involved more or less just shrug it off. I found that disappointing. There are 2 more books in this trilogy but I doubt I will get to them.
Three shots of five.
Thursday, April 19, 2012
A Place to Lay My Head
A Place to Lay My Head
by Joe Moreland
Writing this review has a challenging new twist to it compared to any other review I've ever written. That is the fact that it will most likely be read by the author of the book. Yikes! Never had that happen to me before!
A Place to Lay my Head is Joe's memoir of life in rural Oregon in a very poor family. He's just a few years older than me and his story brought back the days when our best "toys" were our imaginations and our playgrounds were simply undeveloped outdoor landscape. Computer games and fancy playground equipment didn't exist and consequently we explored and used our imaginations and created worlds so much larger than reality. We also took a lot more risks and no one got sued by our parents if we were dumb.
But I digress. This is Joe's story.
The story revolves around the "homes" and jobs his family found. Their longest residence described in the book was at the dump. They started with a broken down school bus and developed it into a maze of rooms consisting of structures built from items salvaged from the dump. Crude and elementary even by the standards of that time, it was fascinating to read how this family thrived in conditions that are unimaginable to me.
The story spans from Joe's earliest memories to his latter years in high school and the family grows from five to seven. This family was poor but in no way lazy or dumb. The book is filled with stories of Joe's father designing, building and/or fixing things to use in their home or on their "farm." He was rarely without a paying job as well. I suspect their financial situation was more due to the way these parents viewed the world than anything else.
Although their home was at the dump, they were also on the edge of Forest Service land. The family worked hard discreetly scraping a little farm out of that land and raised chickens, cows, and vegetables at one time or another. Their playground was a swimming hole and an entire forest.
The children were also hard workers. They were expected to go to school as well as come home to chores. In the summer they cut, hauled & piled wood for the coming winter and found an assortment of jobs to earn cash. I suspect their mother was a victim of some severe post partum depression and this family of boys also hand washed much of their clothing and cooked many of the meals. Indeed, living their life was much harder than most of their contemporaries.
I was struck by some of the seeming lack of respect by the parents. I don't like my choice of words in this case... maybe lack of concern? The incident I am thinking of involves a time they were living in one of the nicest homes they'd had. Yet Mom was unconcerned when her young boys chose the walls as a canvas for their art work. In fact she may have even encouraged them to use the cowboy wallpaper for such. And when Dad brings an entire engine into the house so he can avoid the rain while he works on it, the oil spilling from it causes no reaction. None of this is malicious, it just doesn't seem to concern or bother them.
While I found the story very interesting and such a contrast to my own childhood, I also felt the book was in need of some serious editing. Along with a very nice narrative and occasional photos of the family, there was dialog tossed into the mix. I felt the dialog was unnecessary and dumbed down the text by being too contrived. The story could have been told equally as well without it. I'm not sure if the dialog actually got better as I went along or if I just got used to it, but it wasn't as detracting by the end of the book as at the beginning.
My other complaint was that the book seemed to just stop. The family eventually builds a real home (although the county deemed it not fit to live in) and at that point the story ends.
Huh?
We are told that the house was home to several families over the years and remains standing to this day, but what about the family? I became vested in the lives of these five children and their parents and suddenly they were just gone, with a little hint that the parents and youngest child eventually moved to Washington.
This book needs an epilogue. I know that Joe went on to college, obviously winning a scholarship, but I have no idea about his siblings. Did Ed find his career in fishing? What about the younger children? Why did Mom & Dad leave Oregon?
I need a tidy little bow to wrap up the story. I give this book three of five shots. It's an easy read and quite enjoyable.
by Joe Moreland
Writing this review has a challenging new twist to it compared to any other review I've ever written. That is the fact that it will most likely be read by the author of the book. Yikes! Never had that happen to me before!
A Place to Lay my Head is Joe's memoir of life in rural Oregon in a very poor family. He's just a few years older than me and his story brought back the days when our best "toys" were our imaginations and our playgrounds were simply undeveloped outdoor landscape. Computer games and fancy playground equipment didn't exist and consequently we explored and used our imaginations and created worlds so much larger than reality. We also took a lot more risks and no one got sued by our parents if we were dumb.
But I digress. This is Joe's story.
The story revolves around the "homes" and jobs his family found. Their longest residence described in the book was at the dump. They started with a broken down school bus and developed it into a maze of rooms consisting of structures built from items salvaged from the dump. Crude and elementary even by the standards of that time, it was fascinating to read how this family thrived in conditions that are unimaginable to me.
The story spans from Joe's earliest memories to his latter years in high school and the family grows from five to seven. This family was poor but in no way lazy or dumb. The book is filled with stories of Joe's father designing, building and/or fixing things to use in their home or on their "farm." He was rarely without a paying job as well. I suspect their financial situation was more due to the way these parents viewed the world than anything else.
Although their home was at the dump, they were also on the edge of Forest Service land. The family worked hard discreetly scraping a little farm out of that land and raised chickens, cows, and vegetables at one time or another. Their playground was a swimming hole and an entire forest.
The children were also hard workers. They were expected to go to school as well as come home to chores. In the summer they cut, hauled & piled wood for the coming winter and found an assortment of jobs to earn cash. I suspect their mother was a victim of some severe post partum depression and this family of boys also hand washed much of their clothing and cooked many of the meals. Indeed, living their life was much harder than most of their contemporaries.
I was struck by some of the seeming lack of respect by the parents. I don't like my choice of words in this case... maybe lack of concern? The incident I am thinking of involves a time they were living in one of the nicest homes they'd had. Yet Mom was unconcerned when her young boys chose the walls as a canvas for their art work. In fact she may have even encouraged them to use the cowboy wallpaper for such. And when Dad brings an entire engine into the house so he can avoid the rain while he works on it, the oil spilling from it causes no reaction. None of this is malicious, it just doesn't seem to concern or bother them.
While I found the story very interesting and such a contrast to my own childhood, I also felt the book was in need of some serious editing. Along with a very nice narrative and occasional photos of the family, there was dialog tossed into the mix. I felt the dialog was unnecessary and dumbed down the text by being too contrived. The story could have been told equally as well without it. I'm not sure if the dialog actually got better as I went along or if I just got used to it, but it wasn't as detracting by the end of the book as at the beginning.
My other complaint was that the book seemed to just stop. The family eventually builds a real home (although the county deemed it not fit to live in) and at that point the story ends.
Huh?
We are told that the house was home to several families over the years and remains standing to this day, but what about the family? I became vested in the lives of these five children and their parents and suddenly they were just gone, with a little hint that the parents and youngest child eventually moved to Washington.
This book needs an epilogue. I know that Joe went on to college, obviously winning a scholarship, but I have no idea about his siblings. Did Ed find his career in fishing? What about the younger children? Why did Mom & Dad leave Oregon?
I need a tidy little bow to wrap up the story. I give this book three of five shots. It's an easy read and quite enjoyable.
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Homer's Odyssey
Homer's Odyssey
by Gwen Cooper
Homer was a kitten, found only a few weeks old, with eyes so infected they had to be removed to save his life. Of course an eyeless kitten is hard to find a home for so he was in danger of being euthanized. Gwen Cooper rescues him and adopts him into her family which consists of herself and her two feline fur children adopted previously.
I adore this story of Homer's life. He is truly an amazing cat. His story ranges from out loud funny to tear streaked face to pure amazement. And his Mom's telling of the story is perfect. Like everyone (almost) who meets Homer, I fell in love with him, too, and also wanted to be "Homer's buddy."
Okay, to be honest, I didn't want to just be his buddy, I wanted to be his new mommy and take him for myself.
The things an eyeless cat, at least this eyeless cat, can do are amazing. Like blind people who use echolocation to navigate their world, Homer has super sharp hearing and sense of smell to offset his "disability." Indeed, "disability" can almost hardly be used in describing Homer. He is fearless and determined to make the world his own on his terms.
Homer enters Gwen's life when she has newly broken up with a live-in boyfriend. As Homer's story unfolds, so does Gwen's, although hers is definitely the background story. The most poignant part of the story was the telling of the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center from the author's perspective as the resident of an apartment only a few blocks from ground zero. Forced out of the area with no notice, the despair of not being able to get back to her apartment or her cats was unbearable. I witnessed 9/11 only through news coverage and was enthralled with this personal account.
I am a cat lover and related to this book in many ways with tales and memories of my own roaming through my mind as I read. I would recommend this book to anyone who has ever been owned and loved by a pet. And just one little *SPOILER ALERT* that you probably won't mind... no cats die in this book, of old age or any other cause. I think that would have made it unbearable!
Five shots of five from me.
by Gwen Cooper
Homer was a kitten, found only a few weeks old, with eyes so infected they had to be removed to save his life. Of course an eyeless kitten is hard to find a home for so he was in danger of being euthanized. Gwen Cooper rescues him and adopts him into her family which consists of herself and her two feline fur children adopted previously.
I adore this story of Homer's life. He is truly an amazing cat. His story ranges from out loud funny to tear streaked face to pure amazement. And his Mom's telling of the story is perfect. Like everyone (almost) who meets Homer, I fell in love with him, too, and also wanted to be "Homer's buddy."
Okay, to be honest, I didn't want to just be his buddy, I wanted to be his new mommy and take him for myself.
The things an eyeless cat, at least this eyeless cat, can do are amazing. Like blind people who use echolocation to navigate their world, Homer has super sharp hearing and sense of smell to offset his "disability." Indeed, "disability" can almost hardly be used in describing Homer. He is fearless and determined to make the world his own on his terms.
Homer enters Gwen's life when she has newly broken up with a live-in boyfriend. As Homer's story unfolds, so does Gwen's, although hers is definitely the background story. The most poignant part of the story was the telling of the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center from the author's perspective as the resident of an apartment only a few blocks from ground zero. Forced out of the area with no notice, the despair of not being able to get back to her apartment or her cats was unbearable. I witnessed 9/11 only through news coverage and was enthralled with this personal account.
I am a cat lover and related to this book in many ways with tales and memories of my own roaming through my mind as I read. I would recommend this book to anyone who has ever been owned and loved by a pet. And just one little *SPOILER ALERT* that you probably won't mind... no cats die in this book, of old age or any other cause. I think that would have made it unbearable!
Five shots of five from me.
Sunday, March 11, 2012
I Am Nujood
I Am Nujood, Age 10 and Divorced
Nujood Ali with Delphine Minoui
Nujood is a Yemeni girl, probably around 10 years old. She is born in a very small village in the countryside where no records are kept of births. In a large family with illiterate parents no one is entirely sure of her age, but probably between eight and ten years.
As a young girl with older siblings there are many things happening around her that she doesn't understand. She is interested in things children are. Adult concerns are beyond her interests and understanding.
Nujood's family is cast out of their small village and go to Sana'a, the capitol of Yemen. They arrive as a poor family. Her father loses interest in supporting his family and spends his time chewing khat with his friends as his family loses their home and begin begging on the streets. Eventually he agrees to marry Nujood off to a man three times her age in exchange for a dowry of about $750 (US value).
Understandably, Nujood is very upset by these circumstances and even more so as she learns what marriage means to a woman. Her husband forces himself on her night after night and beats her when she fights his advances. Her days are spent in dread of the coming night and the nightmares that follow. Somehow she finds the strength to go to the courts and ask for a divorce. In her naive mind she believes it will be that easy.
Nujood was fortunate in connecting with judges and a strong female lawyer, Shada Nasser, who were outraged by her circumstances and fought for her divorce. Although she was far below their legal age of marriage, her lack of birth records and the popular practice of marrying girls off this young was not in her favor of being granted a divorce.
This book is Nujood's story and is told as simply as she tells it from the perspective of a child. Her life and struggles are detailed but in its simplicity it failed to elicit the emotional response I expected of myself. I am outraged that her story is one of many and that young girls are simply family possession in too many instances, but I felt detached from the story. For instance, Nujood was told by everyone in the legal system, her attorney and the judges, that her divorce would be very hard to get and she would likely fail. However, it seemed to be granted very easily. Few details of the legal battle are shared.
I do feel it's a good "jumping off" point to learn more. I googled Nujood and Shada trying to find updates on either of them. Nujood is doing well, the royalties from her book helping her family and her education. Shada continues to help young girls in similar circumstances and lobbies for the legal age of marriage in Yemen to be raised. There are more heartbreaking stories that parallel this one, indeed even in Nujood's own family.
I give the book three of five shots. It's a story that needs to be told, but I would have liked more depth.
Nujood Ali with Delphine Minoui
Nujood is a Yemeni girl, probably around 10 years old. She is born in a very small village in the countryside where no records are kept of births. In a large family with illiterate parents no one is entirely sure of her age, but probably between eight and ten years.
As a young girl with older siblings there are many things happening around her that she doesn't understand. She is interested in things children are. Adult concerns are beyond her interests and understanding.
Nujood's family is cast out of their small village and go to Sana'a, the capitol of Yemen. They arrive as a poor family. Her father loses interest in supporting his family and spends his time chewing khat with his friends as his family loses their home and begin begging on the streets. Eventually he agrees to marry Nujood off to a man three times her age in exchange for a dowry of about $750 (US value).
Understandably, Nujood is very upset by these circumstances and even more so as she learns what marriage means to a woman. Her husband forces himself on her night after night and beats her when she fights his advances. Her days are spent in dread of the coming night and the nightmares that follow. Somehow she finds the strength to go to the courts and ask for a divorce. In her naive mind she believes it will be that easy.
Nujood was fortunate in connecting with judges and a strong female lawyer, Shada Nasser, who were outraged by her circumstances and fought for her divorce. Although she was far below their legal age of marriage, her lack of birth records and the popular practice of marrying girls off this young was not in her favor of being granted a divorce.
This book is Nujood's story and is told as simply as she tells it from the perspective of a child. Her life and struggles are detailed but in its simplicity it failed to elicit the emotional response I expected of myself. I am outraged that her story is one of many and that young girls are simply family possession in too many instances, but I felt detached from the story. For instance, Nujood was told by everyone in the legal system, her attorney and the judges, that her divorce would be very hard to get and she would likely fail. However, it seemed to be granted very easily. Few details of the legal battle are shared.
I do feel it's a good "jumping off" point to learn more. I googled Nujood and Shada trying to find updates on either of them. Nujood is doing well, the royalties from her book helping her family and her education. Shada continues to help young girls in similar circumstances and lobbies for the legal age of marriage in Yemen to be raised. There are more heartbreaking stories that parallel this one, indeed even in Nujood's own family.
I give the book three of five shots. It's a story that needs to be told, but I would have liked more depth.
Labels:
Delphine Minoui,
Memoir,
Non-fiction,
Nujood Ali
Friday, March 9, 2012
Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children
Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children
Ranson Riggs
Here I present another selection from the young adult or children's section of the book store or library. There are some fun stories to be found there!
Within the pages of this story you will find many vintage photographs, such as the one on the cover of the book. I couldn't help but think as I read the story that the author must have come across this collection of photos and decided to create a story around them. At the end of the book there is a small blurb along with the photo credits and I do believe the story was indeed conceived while pondering the "photographic evidence."
Jacob is a young child taken with his grandfather's tales of his life in an idyllic, happy home for children where he was sent after his family perished in the war. The children were all "peculiar," each having some strange ability or characteristic. His grandfather shares strange photos of the odd children as he tells his stories.
As Jacob grows older he comes to realize his grandfather had been making up stories to entertain him as a child and he easily sees through the gimmicky photography. The days of boyhood fantasy are now behind him and he helplessly watches as his grandfather slowly loses his hold on reality.
When Jacob's grandfather dies a violent death, Jacob begins to feel his own grasp on reality is slipping. That is until he discovers all of his grandfather's stories are actually true and that he himself is an important ingredient in a story that continues on.
Because I don't want to issue a spoiler alert I'll leave the synopsis of the story at that. Ranson Riggs spins a tale where past and present come together and Jacob has to make the decision of his lifetime. And through it all we meet a cast of quirky characters that I found quite charming, and really not so odd. There will surely be a sequel to this book. I don't think the story can be left where it ended. I only hope we have more peculiar photos to go along with it.
I give this novel four shots of five.
Ranson Riggs
Here I present another selection from the young adult or children's section of the book store or library. There are some fun stories to be found there!
Within the pages of this story you will find many vintage photographs, such as the one on the cover of the book. I couldn't help but think as I read the story that the author must have come across this collection of photos and decided to create a story around them. At the end of the book there is a small blurb along with the photo credits and I do believe the story was indeed conceived while pondering the "photographic evidence."
Jacob is a young child taken with his grandfather's tales of his life in an idyllic, happy home for children where he was sent after his family perished in the war. The children were all "peculiar," each having some strange ability or characteristic. His grandfather shares strange photos of the odd children as he tells his stories.
As Jacob grows older he comes to realize his grandfather had been making up stories to entertain him as a child and he easily sees through the gimmicky photography. The days of boyhood fantasy are now behind him and he helplessly watches as his grandfather slowly loses his hold on reality.
When Jacob's grandfather dies a violent death, Jacob begins to feel his own grasp on reality is slipping. That is until he discovers all of his grandfather's stories are actually true and that he himself is an important ingredient in a story that continues on.
Because I don't want to issue a spoiler alert I'll leave the synopsis of the story at that. Ranson Riggs spins a tale where past and present come together and Jacob has to make the decision of his lifetime. And through it all we meet a cast of quirky characters that I found quite charming, and really not so odd. There will surely be a sequel to this book. I don't think the story can be left where it ended. I only hope we have more peculiar photos to go along with it.
I give this novel four shots of five.
Labels:
Fantasy,
Fiction,
Ranson Riggs,
Teen Fiction
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