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Monday, December 16, 2013
I Never Re-Read Books (Except This One)
6:01 AM
(Image from Barnes & Noble)
I rarely re-read books. Almost never. With so many great new stories out there just waiting to be cracked open, why waste time going back to one I've already experienced? That's my usual philosophy, but sometimes, I get a hankering to re-enjoy an old favorite. Like Harper Lee's classic To Kill a Mockingbird. It's been a long time (high school?) since I first read and loved it, so a re-reading was long, long overdue. And, you guys, I'm so glad I took the opportunity! I swear, everything about this book touches some part of my soul. It's just a beautiful, inspiring, charming story—one that will never get old, no matter how many times I read it.
I'm not even going to attempt any deep literary analysis of To Kill a Mockingbird. That's been done many, many times, and by people much more knowledgeable than I. So, let me just encourage you to read this one, whether for the first time or the twentieth. It's an incredible novel, the kind that should be studied in schools and revered worldwide (oh wait, it already is ...).
(Readalikes: Reminds me of A Time to Kill by John Grisham)
Grade:
If this were a movie, it would be rated:
for brief, mild language (no F-bombs), violence, racial epitaphs and references to rape
(Incidentally, the classic 1962 movie version of To Kill a Mockingbird is Not Rated.)
To the FTC, with love: I bought To Kill a Mockingbird from Amazon using a portion of the millions I make from my lucrative career as a book blogger. Ha ha.
Thursday, December 12, 2013
New E-Short Not Terribly Original, But Who Cares? It's Tempe!
5:37 AM
(Image from Barnes & Noble)
(Note: While this review will not contain spoilers for Bones in Her Pocket, it may inadvertently reveal plot surprises from earlier Temperance Brennan mysteries. As always, I recommend reading books in a series in order.)
If you read this blog with any frequency (and I sure hope you do!), my undying love for anything Temperance Brennan ("anything" actually doesn't include the tv show Bones) does not surprise you in the least. So, naturally, when I heard that Kathy Reichs, the creator of my favorite forensic anthropologist, would be publishing an e-novella starring Tempe, I knew I had to read it.
Except for the length, Bones in Her Pocket acts just like any other book in the Tempe Brennan series, pitting the intrepid scientist against an unknown killer in a tense, action-packed forensic mystery. And, while this newest story doesn't advance any of the subplots relating to our heroine's personal life (darn it!), it does relate another exciting adventure in her professional one.
In this episode, Tempe is called out to a remote artists' colony near a mountain lake in North Carolina. Bones have been discovered inside a water-logged, fly-infested canvas tote bag. Animal bones, she figures. Except they're not. The remains belong to a young woman fitting the description of Edith Blankenship, a missing graduate student. Did Edith's passion for saving the lake's birds get her killed? Did she step on the toes of the wrong eco-radical? How did the ebullient student end up in a watery grave? Using the bones as her guide, Tempe's determined to find out. Before she ends up sharing Edith's fate.
While Bones in Her Pocket is pretty much the same ole, same ole as far as Tempe Brennan books are concerned, I still enjoyed it. Reichs just knows how to pull me in with colorful characters, intriguing mysteries and, of course, with the further development of the already empathetic and likable Tempe (book Tempe is VERY different from t.v. Tempe, by the way). Her adventures—even the brief ones—will always interest me.
FYI: Bones in Her Pocket is only available as an e-book. For just $1.99, it can be purchased at either Amazon, Barnes & Noble or iTunes.
(Readalikes: other books in the Tempe Brennan series [Deja Dead; Death Du Jour; Deadly Decisions; Fatal Voyage; Grave Secrets; Bare Bones; Monday Mourning; Cross Bones; Break No Bones; Bones to Ashes; Devil Bones; 206 Bones; Spider Bones; Flash and Bones; Bones Are Forever; Bones of the Lost]
Grade:
If this were a movie, it would be rated:
for language (1 F-bomb, plus milder invectives), violence and gore
To the FTC, with love: I bought Bones in Her Pocket with a portion of the millions I make from my lucrative career as a book blogger. Ha ha.
Wednesday, December 11, 2013
These Are a Few of My Favorite (Bookish) Things—Part One
8:35 PM

Since I'm already procrastinating on the reviews, I thought I'd give you a little something different today. I've never understood why "These Are a Few of My Favorite Things" from The Sound of Music is played so much at Christmastime (something to do with the "brown paper packages tied up with string," I assume), but the title works well for this post. I've been meaning to tell you about several of these items for a while now, so I'm just going to combine them all into two posts of bookish awesomeness. Sound good? Well, alright then, here we go:
1. Not long ago, I entered a giveaway over at Mommy's Reading Break and won this cute little block stacker. Isn't it adorable? I had my choice of stackers, but this one seemed most appropriate. It sits on my desk, making me smile every time I look at it.
Heather sells all kinds of stackers in her Etsy store, Rutherford Wood Designs. She's got Christmas themes, sports themes, family themes, etc. The stackers are very affordable, running between $8 and $14. They'd make great Christmas gifts, so be sure to check out the store.
2. Have you all heard about SwoonReads? It's a new website run by Macmillan that allows authors of YA romances to publish their manuscripts online and lets readers browse titles and leave their feedback about the books. Those entries that get the best response will be considered by Macmillan for publication. Cool, right? I'm going to let Stephanie Moore, an author from Utah whose book, A Flutter of Butterfly Wings, is up on the site right now tell you a little more about this very cool program:
Hello my fellow bookies! I’m Stephanie and am excited to be visiting here today. A little about myself, I’m a SAHM with four awesome kids, three boys and a baby girl. I love reading and often find myself in the YA section. Aren’t some of the best stories those where characters are coming of age, figuring out who they want to be and finding their first love?Cool, right?
My other passion is writing, which is what brings me here today. As I was finishing edits on a YA manuscript, I ran across an article talking about a new imprint from Macmillan Books, Swoon Reads. What caught my attention is that it utilizes crowdsourcing to find manuscripts to publish. So writers upload their finished works and readers come and read, rate and comment on them. The highly ranked manuscripts will get read by the editorial staff and could be chosen for publication. It’s the American Idol of the YA publishing world. As a writer, I am so excited for this because it breaks down so many barriers that lay in front of an unpublished author. In a conversation I had with Jean Feiwel, the Publisher of Swoon Reads, she said she wanted to tear down the barriers so deserving manuscripts can more easily be found and it gives them a better pulse on what readers want to read. Have you ever wanted a say in what books get published? Now’s your chance! It was recently announced the first book selection will be made in February so head over there and let your voice be heard before February 1st. After an easy sign up (literally only 5 spaces to fill out) you can read as many manuscripts as you want, absolutely for free. Yay for free good reads! So come take a look, let your voice be heard, for good and bad, and help an unpublished author realized his/her dream. Like yours truly, my manuscript, A Flutter of Butterfly Wings, is up there right now. (http://www.swoonreads.com/m/a-flutter-of-butterfly-wings) To sign up and start reading today, go to: http://www.swoonreads.com/sign-up. Thanks for having me, Susan, and for creating such a great blog that brings all of us bookaholics together.
3. Remember back in the summer when I was
Obviously, this isn't the best picture, but trust me, my bookshelf is a beaut! It's 9 feet high and 12 feet wide. It holds lots of review books as well as others from my personal library. I'm not going to tell you what percentage of the books on the shelf are review books because that would just be embarrassing! And, yes, I'm well aware of the irony of displaying a sign (it's on the top, center shelf) that says "Simplify" on a bookshelf that holds 1000 books or more. Yeah.
So, what bookish things are you loving lately?
Labels:Misc.,This and That | 3
bookworm(s) said...
Wednesday, November 27, 2013
If It Weren't For Those Weird, Awkward Scenes ...
9:59 AM
(Image from Barnes & Noble)
With the threat of nuclear war hanging in the balmy air, the summer of 1962 feels unlike any other. Scott Porter spends the long, school-free days doing what he's always done—playing baseball with his friends, spying on girls, trying to stay out of trouble—but the 11-year-old goes home to alarming newspaper headlines and hissed, heated discussions between his parents. To the endless amusement of their less-paranoid neighbors, Scott's dad has built a bomb shelter for his family. If worse comes to worst, the Porters will have everything they need to survive underground for two weeks, the time it will take for the radiation-saturated air to clear. Scott hopes there will never be a need to use the shelter, but as global tension intensifies, he can't be quite sure there will be a tomorrow at all.
When the unthinkable happens, Scott finds himself crammed into the shelter, not just with his family but also with six of his disbelieving neighbors. The supplies Scott's father stocked can't last for long, not with ten people using them. And civility's running out even faster. As the days wear on, the shell-shocked refugees must learn to survive—not just whatever happened in the outside world, but everything that's taking place inside the crowded shelter. With tempers flaring, food being rationed, and cabin fever taking its toll, busting out of the shelter is looking better and better. No one knows what's happened to the New York they left above ground. Do the terrified shelter-dwellers dare to emerge? What will they find if they do? Which will kill them faster—radiation, starvation or each other? Scott's about to find out.
Everything about the premise of Fallout by Todd Strasser appeals to me. An imminent apocalypse? Check. Neighbors pitted against neighbors in a desperate bid for survival? Check. A tense, psychological examination of people's actions in a time of crisis, told from a child's point-of-view? Check, check. Because, apparently, I have a warped sense of what is entertaining, I really, really wanted to read this book. So, I did. Is the story as fascinating as it sounds? In a word: yes. Fallout tells a tense, compelling tale that kept me burning through the pages to find out the fate of the survivors. If it weren't for some weird, awkward discussions about naked women (including the boys' mothers), I would have really enjoyed this one. Given those odd scenes, plus the fact that Fallout is (naturally) quite depressing, this novel turned into just an okay read for me. Ah, well.
(Readalikes: Reminded me of other books about groups of people struggling to survive crises in enclosed spaces like Trapped by Michael Northrop; The Compound by S.A. Bodeen; and The Diary of Anne Frank; also of Countdown by Deborah Wiles, which is also about the Cuban Missile Crisis)
Grade:
If this were a movie, it would be rated:
for language (no F-bombs), violence, sexual innuendo and mature themes
To the FTC, with love: I received a finished copy of Fallout from the generous folks at Candlewick Press. Thank you!
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