Books

Unfortunately, with the size of my TBR there are simply some books I just can't get to and Saving CeeCee Honeycutt is one that I've had waiting since it came out, but have yet to read. I've heard such wonderful things about it, but it ju...
Unfortunately, with the size of my TBR there are simply some books I just can't get to and Saving CeeCee Honeycutt is one that I've had waiting since it came out, but have yet to read. I've heard such wonderful things about it, but it just had to wait. When I read about Beth Hoffman's latest, Looking for Me, I knew I would love it and as soon as it arrived I placed it on the very top of the reading pile. I'm so glad I did! Teddi Overman has loved restoring antique furniture since she was a girl. Her mother always thought it was a huge waste of time, even if Teddi sold every piece she touched almost immediately. After graduating high school, Teddi decides to take a chance and move away to pursue her dream, landing in Charleston working for an antiques dealer. Fast forward a few years and Teddi owns her own successful shop and creates beautiful pieces of art, salvaging broken furniture from yard sales and scrap piles. Even with her success, Teddi is still drawn back to her home in Kentucky when she learns her brother Josh, who disappeared years before, may still be alive. This has got to be one of the best books I've read this year. Teddi was a quirky main character with a fun and unique passion, making for an easy hook in the beginning. There was enough humor to occasionally make me chuckle, despite the heaviness of portions of the story, and Southern culture just dripped from the pages. I wanted to be friends with Teddi about as much as I wanted to buy a piece of her furniture. Though definitely a stand alone story, I almost wish Hoffman would create a series around Teddi's shop, like Marie Bostwick's quilting books or the knitting series by Debbie Macomber. The book was charming and lovable and I want to hand it to everyone I know! Now, I'm off to read Saving CeeCee Honeycutt. The lovely people at Penguin have offered up a copy for one of my readers! Trust me, you want to enter this one -- SO GOOD. Just leave your name and a way to contact you in the comment section before Sunday night at 11:59 p.m. and I'll have Random.org select a winner Monday morning. If you'd like a second entry, tweet about the giveaway and leave your Twitter handle in a second comment. No need to follow me (unless you'd like to!), just spread the word. U.S. entries only.
16 minutes ago
Terra Tempo: Ice Age Cataclysm!, by David Shapiro (illustrated by Christopher Herndon with color by Erica Melville; Craigmore Creations, 2010) is a time travel graphic novel in which three kids use a magical map to travel back to the end...
Terra Tempo: Ice Age Cataclysm!, by David Shapiro (illustrated by Christopher Herndon with color by Erica Melville; Craigmore Creations, 2010) is a time travel graphic novel in which three kids use a magical map to travel back to the end of the Ice Age in North America, just in time to watch Glacial Lake Missoula break through its ice dam. It's essentially a science lesson nestled within an adventure story--the intent of the book is to instruct, and indeed it's a clearly presented look at a fascinating moment in time. Twins Jenna and Caleb find the great uncle's mysterious travel journal that seems to contain instructions for time travel, along with a map showing the Missoula flood. Along with a third kid, Ari (keenly interested in Ice Age fauna), they follow the directions....and they work. Now the kids must keep from being eaten by the local fauna, with the help of a friendly Thunderbird, who flies them over the landscape, giving them a chance to see the lake, and its flood, from a wonderfully unique perspective.The illustrations are lovely, and engrossing; the adventures of the kids somewhat less so. However, because the story is punctuated with didactic intrusions, it doesn't flow all that smoothly as fiction. I don't mind learning through fiction, but the balance felt a bit off to me here...It didn't help that the great uncle's journal contained important bits of information conveyed in forced rhyme.At one point, toward the end, the kids see a village from the air, right in the path of the flood, and I was hopeful that some honest to goodness Story would happen (as opposed to sight-seeing and occasionally menacing fauna), but nothing more comes of it.Sort answer--this would be an invaluable tool to use in introducing kids to the end of the Ice Age. It is beautifully illustrated, and the subject is interesting. But it's not one to necessarily offer your kid who loves graphic novels for their stories.That being said, this one might not have worked that well for my particular family because we have watched Mystery of the Megaflood a gazillion times because that's the sort of kid my oldest is...so I think I'll get hold of the second book, The Four Corners of Time. We know a lot less about the Cretaceous Period on the Colorado Plateau, and the good thing about visually appealing graphic novels like this is that they will be read by the aforementioned picky reader kid, even if they are not passionately loved.
about 1 hour ago
This TV movie is based on a fairly late novel by Louis L'Amour, and it adapts well to the screen. Tom Shaughnessy is an Irish boxer in New York who runs afoul of a local crime boss by not losing a bout where he was supposed to take a div...
This TV movie is based on a fairly late novel by Louis L'Amour, and it adapts well to the screen. Tom Shaughnessy is an Irish boxer in New York who runs afoul of a local crime boss by not losing a bout where he was supposed to take a dive, and he winds up injured and fleeing New York in a railroad boxcar. He passes out and doesn't come to until the train is stopped at a siding in Kansas, where Shaughnessy promptly collapses again.You know how these things work from there. Shaughnessy winds up becoming the marshal of a wild cowtown, makes assorted friends and enemies, and winds up facing down the bad guys, although he handles things more with his fists than with a gun.Predictable or not, it makes for an entertaining yarn. Matthew Settle, who went on to a long-running role on GOSSIP GIRL, is a long way from New York's upper east side in this one but does a good job as Shaughnessy. There are plenty of good characters in the cast, such as Bo Hopkins, Stuart Whitman, John Hawkes, and John Carroll Lynch. The scenery's good and the action scenes are well done. The screenplay is by William Blinn, who was involved with a couple of Seventies icons: he wrote the screenplay for the original BRIAN'S SONG, and he created the series STARSKY AND HUTCH. I was a big fan of both, so it's always good to see Blinn's work. (He's also the author of a Western novel, A COLD DAY IN HELL, which is on my shelves but which I haven't read yet.)The problem with SHAUGHNESSY, THE IRON MARSHAL is that it seems to have been the pilot for a TV series that didn't sell, and as such, some of the major plotlines are left unresolved. It's a shame they weren't able to at least make a couple more movies to wrap things up. But as it stands, this is a pretty enjoyable low-budget Western and certainly worth watching if you come across it.
about 1 hour ago
#Giraffe LBCVenue: Giraffe Bar and GrillDate: Tuesday 20th of April 2013Time: 6pm - 8pmAddress: 6 Greek Street, Leeds, LS1 5RWTel: (0113) 244 1500 LOGAN'S RUNWILLIAM F. NOLAN AND GEORGE CLAYTON JOHNSON* * * * * SPOILERS * * * * ** * *...
#Giraffe LBCVenue: Giraffe Bar and GrillDate: Tuesday 20th of April 2013Time: 6pm - 8pmAddress: 6 Greek Street, Leeds, LS1 5RWTel: (0113) 244 1500 LOGAN'S RUNWILLIAM F. NOLAN AND GEORGE CLAYTON JOHNSON* * * * * SPOILERS * * * * ** * * * * SPOILERS * * * * ** * * * * SPOILERS * * * * * Huge thanks as ever to our wonderful Superstar Guest star @AlisonNeale for providing us with this terrific write up. BLURBIt's the 23rd Century and at age 21... your life is over! Logan-6 has been trained to kill; born and bred from conception to be the best of the best. But his time is short and before his life ends he's got one final mission: Find and destroy Sanctuary, a fabled haven for those that chose to defy the system. But when Logan meets and falls in love with Jessica, he begins to question the very system he swore to protect and soon they're both running for their lives. When Last Day comes, will you lie down and die... or run! Those who had seen it felt that the film had taken the best bits of the book, and while loyal in concept, retained little of the story line. So to begin, let’s have a little comparison:In the book people died at 21: at this age one is fairly clueless about the world (in a nice way), less likely to have formed a major attachment to another person, and would thus perhaps evoke less sympathy from the reader, despite the pure youth element. However, knowing of one’s imminent demise, one would live life faster, so perhaps this is flawed logic. Meanwhile, in the film one died at 30: general consensus was that by 30 we wouldn’t have the energy left to run.The book was pre-apocalyptic: there are few references to anything wrong, except the phrase ‘the thinker was self-repairing, or supposed to be’, and some further comments at the end. The film was rather different here: post-apocalyptic, as the computer has already malfunctioned.While it might not have felt this way when the film first came out, bookclubbers felt that the casting of Michael Yorke turned them off the film. It was also suggested that the age limit was raised as he wouldn’t be a realistic 21 year-old. Harsh, but fair.On the subject of antihero vs. hero, in the book some readers were never quite sure if Logan would go through with destroying Sanctuary, as he was genuinely at the end of his own life and seemed to fluctuate in his sympathies. In the film, however, Logan was more certainly an antihero, having given up precious years of his life to go on this mission.The key comparison between formats, however, was felt to be the book’s sad lack of Peter Ustinov and his cats.Concentrating on the book, now (it is a book club, after all!), fundamentally the story’s main premise was flawed: killing everyone at 21 doesn’t solve the overpopulation problem, and why would anyone ever have chosen to do this? Also, there seemed to be nothing worth living for in this world, so why wouldn’t you run earlier? ‘Everything comes to us on a platter - man’s got nothing left to live for’, which ties in with the noticeable lack of the arts, while they all seem to travel and practice dangerous sports. One bookclubber wanted it stressed that as opposed to wandering off topic, she made an excellent point here about the Scottish Parliament considering 16 year-olds getting the vote, and how unwise this was in light of the book’s subject matter.We all concurred… and ate more chips.One bookclubber expressed a liking for this era of sci-fi writing, when stories contrasted with the relative prosperity of the day. For those not familiar with the type, the bells-and-whistles ending involving a Real Spaceship was a surprise; for others, not so much. (The discussion briefly diverted to how the spaceship would be launched without everyone knowing about its existence; it was decided that this happened at night. Clever, innit?)The ending was described as ‘myopic’, with some people then rapidly scribbling notes hoping that no one noticed that they couldn’t recall what this meant until they go
about 2 hours ago
Title: The Hazards of Skinny Dipping (Goodreads) Publisher: Self-Published Source: Inkslinger PR Publication Date: 21 May 2013 Series or Standalone: Standalone ISBN: 9781484044179 Format: ebook (ARC) Pages: 305 ...
Title: The Hazards of Skinny Dipping (Goodreads) Publisher: Self-Published Source: Inkslinger PR Publication Date: 21 May 2013 Series or Standalone: Standalone ISBN: 9781484044179 Format: ebook (ARC) Pages: 305 The Author on the Web: Alyssa Rose Ivy - Official Site Alyssa Rose Ivy - Blog Alyssa Rose Ivy - Twitter Place(s) Traveled to: Kiawah, South Carolina // Charleston, South Carolina // Savannah, Georgia // West Ashley, South Carolina Rating: 3 out of 5 stars First Line: Skinny dipping was the last thing on my list. I had a really hard time getting into The Hazards of Skinny Dipping by Alyssa Rose Ivy and this made me sad as I really enjoyed her Clayton Falls series. I just couldn't connect with the main character, Juliet, who flitted between a TSTL character to one that just needed a b!tch slap as she was so annoying. The dialogue in the early part of the book was also off putting as it was stilted and read more as an early draft of a first novel and not by an experienced author. There were several times when I was ready to just give up on this one but I kept with it since I am part of her Release Day Blitz and Blog Tour. While the beginning of the book may not of thrilled me there was this shift in tone and writing somewhere in the middle and I became invested in the story. I liked Juliet a little better though she's still not my favorite character in the book. I also would have liked to see a bit more from her friends, Cara and Mallory, and even her roommate but maybe those stories will be told in future books that Alyssa Rose Ivy writes. After all, to be part of a series is more the norm than a stand alone book these days. Another thing I liked is that the character that Juliet obsessed over was far from perfect. Not only was he your typical douche love interest character. You know the one, the guy that the MC seems to love and yet the reader knows is bad news and keeps mentally telling the character so? Well, that is Dylan. But he's popular and handsome and just seems to have everything only the thing that you think would be super wonderful is far from it. Juliet is then torn between living her dream and dealing with the harsh realities of the world. Then there are two other boys who also like Juliet and while both have cookie cutter good guy potential they too exhibit flaws that help to humanize them. As a reader, you are torn at times between these two but you know in the end that there is only one choice. For me, this book was made with the last half of the story. There was tension, drama, and even a few heart achy moments. And you know how much I love my heart achy moments! While Hazards of Skinny Dipping had a rocky start for me I did enjoy how it ended. I'm glad that I decided not to DNF this one because then I would have missed some fun moments in this story. If I could cut out or revise the first part of the book I would as the second half was just so much better in every way. The writing and the dialogue all just seemed to pop more. Skinny Dipping is flawed in places but I don't feel like my time was wasted with the read, or at least, it wasn't once I got into the story. a Rafflecopter giveaway The Hazards of Skinny Dipping This isn't a deep book about first loves or self-discovery. If you want a book like that, I'd be happy to recommend one, but I don't have that kind of story to tell. Instead my story is about rash decisions and finding out that your dream guy is bad in bed. It's the story of when I finally went skinny dipping, and how my life was never the same again. Oh, and it's also the story of my freshman year of college and realizing Mr. Right might have been there all along. Author Bio: Alyssa Rose Ivy is a New Adult and Young Adult author who loves to weave stories with romance and a southern setting. Although raised in the New York area, she fell in love with the South after mo
about 2 hours ago
A Life Of Experience by Alan PhillipsAbused by his father, Michael Parker leaves home at sixteen and becomes embroiled in the gay prostitution scene on the streets of London. From there he then finds himself involved in gay pornography a...
A Life Of Experience by Alan PhillipsAbused by his father, Michael Parker leaves home at sixteen and becomes embroiled in the gay prostitution scene on the streets of London. From there he then finds himself involved in gay pornography and is quite successful and in demand. Wishing to get away from that world, he manages to escape and become a male model. His good looks and natural ability in front of a camera lead him into television as a legitimate actor but at the pinnacle of his career his early life is exposed in the press and he confronts his nemesis with disastrous consequences. Ten years after winning a BAFTA award for best newcomer Michael has to start rebuilding his life all over again.This book was published through a subsidy publisher. My thanks to Lis for letting me know about "A Life Of Experiene." Add your review in comments!
about 2 hours ago
New this week: And the Mountains Echoed by Khaled Hosseini; The Redeemer, a new Harry Hole novel from Jo Nesbø (see our interview); and Abigail Tarttelin’s debut novel Golden Boy. Also out: The Fall of Arthur, J.R.R. Tolkien’...
New this week: And the Mountains Echoed by Khaled Hosseini; The Redeemer, a new Harry Hole novel from Jo Nesbø (see our interview); and Abigail Tarttelin’s debut novel Golden Boy. Also out: The Fall of Arthur, J.R.R. Tolkien’s epic poem, and George Packer’s The Unwinding. Bonus Links: You can now subscribe to listings of literary new releases in your feed reader with this RSS feed. Plus, check out more new release RSS feeds here. Related posts: Tuesday New Release Day: Larson, Nesbø, Brown, Earle, Udall, Marlantes Purveyor of popular nonfiction Erik Larson has a new book... Tuesday New Rease Day: Nesbø, Tillman Jo Nesbø has a new noir from the North this... Tuesday New Release Day: Johnson, Auslander New books this week: Adam Johnson’s much talked-about novel The...
about 2 hours ago
In Marilynne Robinson’s brilliant and engaging essay, “Imagination and Community,” she writes that we live on a small island that consists of what can be said, “which we tend to mistake for reality itself.” As she transforms the voices o...
In Marilynne Robinson’s brilliant and engaging essay, “Imagination and Community,” she writes that we live on a small island that consists of what can be said, “which we tend to mistake for reality itself.” As she transforms the voices of her narrators into the sentences of her fictions, she tries to make “inroads on the vast terrain of what cannot be said — or said by me, at least.” The result has been three novels, all award winners, still selling well in dozens of languages. Now along comes A Questionable Shape, a wisely titled and rich first novel by Bennett Sims, who in his own way explores what Robinson calls “the frontiers of the unsayable.” Before I go further, perhaps I should say that I am sixty-something and a picky reader, someone whose favorite novels fill a single shelf. There sit Robinson and Faulkner, Isaac Babel, Elio Vittorini, J.M. Coetzee’s Waiting for the Barbarians. Herta Müller’s Herztier, Juan Rulfo’s Pedro Páramo. Nuruddin Farah’s Maps, Javier Marías’s Your Face Tomorrow. Like Sims, I studied with Robinson. Unlike him, I have not found an easy way into the works of David Foster Wallace, with whom he also studied, and to whom he dedicates this book: “For Dave.” On the surface, the storyline of A Questionable Shape is simple. During an epidemic of undeath that has savaged Baton Rouge and the world, a loner, plumber, and collector/hoarder has vanished and is presumed undead. His son wants to find him, even though the father he knows and loves has changed so completely that he would bite his only son and leave him incurably undead. The narrator joins the search, thereby risking being bitten, too. “What we know about the undead so far is this: they return to the familiar,” the narrator begins. “…They will climb into their own cars and sit dumbly at the wheel, staring out the windshield into nothing. A man bitten, infected, and reanimated fifty miles from home will find his way back, staggering over diverse terrain — which, probably, he wouldn’t have recognized or been able to navigate in his mortal life — in order to stand vacantly on a familiar lawn.” Who among us has not sat at the steering wheel of a vehicle staring into nothing, or stood vacantly on a lawn or a grassless patch of dirt staring at something no one else could see? Or, for that matter, staggered. Herein lies one strength of Sims’ novel — we are as likely at certain moments to identify with the undead as with the living: to see ourselves too easily as stunted, ravaged, hardly human. But, dear Reader, do not be fooled. You are fully human. Also, undeath is the topic of A Questionable Shape the way Yoknapatawpha County is the topic of Faulkner, which is to say, it is merely the apparent topic, the setting, the metaphor, the externality that allows the narrator to settle in and explore the shades, shapes, and melodies of consciousness and experience. As Sims’s narrative moves forward, he uses footnotes, asides, diversions, explications, and lyrical imaginings to produce in the reader a kind of double vision of the mind, an extra set of eyes somewhere back in the head. The two friends, both of whom are addicted to books, but in different ways, try to imagine themselves deep enough into the mind of the missing man to discover the locales he would long for in his undeath. When he was living, he lifted coffee to his lips in a certain café, browsed through the daily objects of yesteryear in a particular antiques mall, watched movies with his son in their favorite theater. But does that mean his savaged mind, reduced to its most intense nostalgias, would drag its ruined body back to any of those spots? This and other questions lead the narrator into meditations on yearning, life, death, time, memory, nostalgia, sight, insight, wisdom. On the world as it is and as it seems to be. On the perplexities of trying to know and understand the people we are closest to. Often the narrator observes his partner closely, trying to understand her. In his rec
about 2 hours ago
Well, this has been an unexpectedly busy week! I have two new releases to celebrate. The long-awaited print release of A Taste of Honey (Oberon, book 4) and the hopefully-much-anticipated digital release of Ashes of the Day (Children of ...
Well, this has been an unexpectedly busy week! I have two new releases to celebrate. The long-awaited print release of A Taste of Honey (Oberon, book 4) and the hopefully-much-anticipated digital release of Ashes of the Day (Children of Night, book 4). A Taste of Honey is one of my all-time favorite books. I was just talking about that with a friend when I was at RT earlier this month. That’s why I’m thrilled that it’s finally in print! I loved the characters of Lucy and Dan, even if they did disrupt my sleep for months—waking me up and demanding I tell their story. Not that I minded too much; I loved their story, after all. Just like I loved the fact that, since much of their book was set in May, I got to celebrate Spring in California in all its abundant glory. This story isn’t just about two people who love each other very much but still manage to sometimes make mistakes, it’s about a whole family. Considering how much of the sub-plots revolve around teenagers, and food, various business enterprises (not to mention angels!) this still manages to be a very sexy book. Check it out here: http://www.amazon.com/Taste-Honey-Oberon-4/dp/0744307872Ashes of the Day features another of my very favorite couples—vampires Conrad and Damian. They also haunted my dreams for many months. They’re also all wrapped up in family matters. I actually thought I’d gotten the two of them settled way back in book two, Old Sins, Long Shadows, but it’s taken another two books just to tie up all the loose ends. In this story, the Fischer-Quintano family is once again center-stage with flashbacks to the twins’ formative years, struggles as they grapple for independence and, more heartbreak and loss. Hey, they’re vampires—and not the kind that sparkle, either. It can’t always be rainbows and sunshine for them. But at least they have cookies—and you can too, if you enter my giveaway:Ashes of the Day is currently on sale here: http://store.samhainpublishing.com/ashes-of-the-day-p-7402.htmla Rafflecopter giveaway
about 2 hours ago
The first novel published through Hardie Grant Egmont's new Ampersand Project, an imprint dedicated to debut YA novels, Life In Outer Space is just the loveliest. As a result, I am very much looking forward to what the Ampersand Project ...
The first novel published through Hardie Grant Egmont's new Ampersand Project, an imprint dedicated to debut YA novels, Life In Outer Space is just the loveliest. As a result, I am very much looking forward to what the Ampersand Project discovers next. Reminiscent of Six Impossible Things by Fiona Wood in terms of adorable romance (and a little bit Shirley Marr's Preloved too), Life In Outer Space is just nice, you know? I don't know how to express this properly (if we could mind-meld you'd get it - how much easier everything would be if we could mind-meld), but sometimes I tire of all the edgy, and the gritty, and the ever-present overly masculine and borderline-disturbing love interest (I mean, really) and I just want to read a novel with people I can relate to in it. It's like a YA novel version of a rom-com with all these socially awkward nerdy kids in it (who are actually really cool and awesome, despite their professed geekiness). It's funny and endearing and chock full of movie references (do you think I've used the phrase 'chock full' on this blog before?) and there's a little bit of World of Warcraft in there, too. It's not groundbreaking - just boy-meets-girl, boy-is-socially-awkward, boy-eventually-realises-he-loves-girl but it's so darn nice/adorably funny. I love Camilla myself, and I also love Melissa Keil and I'd quite like it if another Keil novel were published very soon (why does must it take so long for books to be written? Again, mind-melds, they'd be handy). Here it is on Goodreads, should you care for a blurb or a second opinion.
about 2 hours ago