Sunday, November 11, 2007

More books...

"Bonded", by Donna Jo Napoli was on my daughter's reading list for school. A short book, it is based on the Cinderella story, but revolves around a Chinese girl who never gets her feet bound, and her half sister and her bound feet. Since we are so "Disneyfied", it came as somewhat of a surprise to me how old the Cinderella story is and how there are several old Chinese "Cinderella" tales. This was a good book to read, even for an adult.

"Duncton Wood", by William Horwood, must have been sitting on my mother's shelf for more than 20 years because it was published in 1980. The writer spent several years secluded in the forest and emerged to write this entertaining family-saga about moles. It follows the lives of several moles, their births, their rise to leadership, their deaths, their loves, their journeys and their spirituality.

"Step on a Crack", by James Patterson. I read this in one day. It has a lot of short chapters and while I was reading it I was wondering why I wasting my time on another book like this. A short murder-mystery and I never did figure out what the title of the book had to do with the story. Sorry, that's all you get from me on this one.

"Trace", by Patricia Cornwell. I read this a month or two ago. Frankly, it was so memorable that I have to read the back cover to remember what it was about. Oh yes, another Scarpetta novel about her after she was fired from the Virginia as chief medical examiner. If you are following Scarpetta's life through all her other books, it's good to see she landed on her feet somewhere.

"Eat Pray Love", by Elizabeth Gilbert mostly follows a year in the life of Elizabeth Gilbert. She has a very natural, easy way of writing that makes it easy to fly through the book. She reveals a lot of personal history and personal everything...well, not sure if there is anything personal left that we don't know about from this year in her life. She runs off to Italy to learn the language and eat, then off to India to hang out in an ashram, and then over to Indonesia where she falls in love. I think I enjoyed reading more about the friends she made in all these places than anything else in the book.

Sunday, August 12, 2007

Dean Koontz "Brother Odd" & Sophie Kinsellsa "Shopaholic & Baby"

"Brother Odd" is based on a character that was developed in an earlier book, one of which I read but remember nothing about! This was a good, interesting read set at a monastery but the ending leaves you to believe there may be another one! Thumbs up!

"Shopaholic & Baby" was just as enjoyable as the previous books! If you didn't read any of the earlier ones, you can still pick this one up to read. But if you do, it will make you want to go back and start at the beginning of the series. Thumbs up as usual for this book with its British humor.

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Brad Meltzer "The Book of Fate"

"The Book of Fate" has some comparisons to a John Grisham's writing, but it seems more like a cross between Dan Brown and John Grisham. The history is Dan Brownish, but the constant running from someone trying to kill you is both. It was a great story, well-written and even though it was a book of fiction, it was weaved around even facts that what took place could seem quite plausible. I give it a thumbs up!

"The Millionaires" - I think this was one of those books I left up in Martha's Vineyard while on vacation! It was a great story about 2 brothers, one the high achiever, the other the somewhat struggler, and how innocent brothers are set up to take the fall for the "higher ups" in the firm. The brothers work for an investment firm for only the richest of the rich, and when they find something they were not supposed to find, it leads to a lot of mayhem and murder! If you are not one of the richest elite of the world, it will fascinate you to read about the large sums of money that are transferred around, and that even the rich are still greedy for more. I also give this one a thumbs up!

Tuesday, July 03, 2007

Latest Books

I took a book hiatus to catch up on old magazines that had piled up. A book or two slid into the mix of all that but I didn't bother to keep up with them.

However, I took 5 books on vacation in June and if I can remember what they were (I actually left them along the trip as I finished them), I'll list them here:

After reading 3 books on my trip that involved murders and pathologists, I wanted something without all that so I picked up Sandra Brown's "Ricochet", only to find one more book with a murder and some sleazy cops. It was a bit suspenseful but predictable at best for me. I had already started to feel like a pro after the other 3 books I had read:

Tess Gerritsen, "The Mephisto Club" was based in Boston (where we happened to be at the time) and was an interesting twist and turn into how people who study criminals can actually make them create gruesome crimes to get their attention. It was a bit different read than the others, but still involved murder and mayhem and autopsies. Ugh.

James Patterson and Andrew Gross' "Judge & Jury" was also about murder and mayhem and kept you interested to the very end. It involved a single mother as a jurist and brings to light how unsafe you can be if picked for the wrong jury. Very believable.

Frankly, the other book was so memorable that I cannot even remember what it was about, but the same theme as the 2 above.

A book I started back in May and recently finished was Suite Francaise by Irene Nemirovsky. This book was started by Irene before she was taken to a concentration camp, never to return. It appears to be 2 parts to what was a "never-finished" novel. Because of the timing of the events in the book, which were June, 1940 to July, 1941, it appears that she was writing the book simultaneously to events that were happening at the very moment. Although the book doesn't really seem to end, it still gives you a very different perspective of living in France during WWII and the writings describing the various classes of society and their reactions to the war around them are fascinating. It gets a bit boring at the beginning of the 2nd section but if you stick with you will get wound up in the story.

Probably the best book I have read since "The Historian" is one I had on my bookshelf for quite some time, "The Life of Pi" by Yann Martel. This book was nothing like what I thought from the title (can't judge a book by its cover for certain on this one!). It was so fantastical that I gave it to my 13-year-old daughter to read and we are still commenting about parts of the book. It is not a long book but it is based on interviews of Pi (the person) that were recorded in the late 1970's and recollections of a short period of time back then. I don't want to tell anymore as to spoil the book for anyone else wanting to read it.

Sunday, January 21, 2007

Sue Grafton, 'A' is for Alibi & Karin Slaughter, "Triptych"

I picked up the Sue Grafton book at a used book store because I have read several of the Kinsey Millhone mysteries, but didn't know how it all began! 'A' is for Alibi was entertaining, more so since I have read some already up to Q or R. If you like a series involving basically the same characters, this is a good series to pick up.

"TripTych" by Karin Slaughter, who I really just read a book or two of hers this past year for the first time, interested me more than the others since it was based in Atlanta. It manages to take a very clever, twisty turn of events and characters, enough that you finally figure out who is who. The character development is enough that it can get under your skin a bit, enough to really understand where the character is in his/her mind.

Sunday, December 03, 2006

Two Little Girls in Blue, The House, At Risk & Pope Joan

Mary Higgins Clark, "Two Little Girls in Blue" but definitely along the lines of previous Mary Higgins Clark. Very suspenseful. A quick read. Would recommend to anyone who likes her novels.

The House, by Danielle Steele, is one of the better one of Steele's novels I have read, seeing that I haven't read one in 12 years. The last one I read was so awful, I threw it in the trash rather than pass it on. Since I live in a 117 year-old house, this story was something more that I could relate to.

At Risk, by Patricia Cornwell, seemed more like a short story. It was a quick and suspenseful read but I have read much better from Cornwell. Done in one afternoon.

The best book I have read lately is "Pope Joan" by Donna Woolfolk Cross. Reminded me a bit of "The Historian" but not as lengthy. A wonderfully written book and fascinating to read about this bit of "erased" history from the Catholic church. I would definitely recommend this book.

Sunday, October 08, 2006

Collection of latest readings...

"The Husband" by Dean Koontz
The wife gets kidnapped, and the husband, who is an ordinary gardener who wouldn't normally hurt a fly, rises to the occasion to get his wife back. Another entertaining page turner.

"Killer Dreams"
Another Iris Johansen book, the main character, a woman, has some type of mysterious past and has a child she is raising on her own. In comes a commando-type character she despises and ends up, well, just read the book. Same basic overall theme as the other one's I've read by the same author.

John Sandfords, "Hidden Prey" and "Mind Prey"
I am not sure why these 2 old books arrived on my bookshelf, but "Mind Prey" was published in 1995 and "Hidden Prey" in 2004. "Mind Prey" was the 7th book in a series featuring Deputy Chief Lucas Davenport and all his cohorts. I wasn't crazy about the book overall until I picked up "Hidden Prey", the 16th book with Lucas Davenport. I became more curious about what happened to his personal life between all those books and the second one was more enjoyable because I felt familiar with the main characters.

"Sam's Letters to Jennifer" by James Patterson
Reminded me somewhat of a Nicolas Sparks novel, but with a little more depth to the character development. It was very different from the other James Patterson novels I have read and was enjoyable to read about this woman who returns home and starts to read letters addressed to her.

"Sandcastles" by Luanne Rice
Starting out in Ireland, this book's setting changes back to the Connecticut shore and follows what happens after he husband returns home. Everyone's secret past is slowly unrolled throughout the novel coming to a lovely, but predictable end.

"Prior Bad Acts" by Tami Hoag
A horrible crime changes the lives of all who investigate it, and this story reveals how hard it is for officials to distance themselves from a crime, and what happens when they don't. A strong woman figure is brought to her knees and bounced back up again, as is the theme of most of these books I have been reading this year.

"Sweetgrass" by Mary Alice Monroe
Set in the South Carolina lowcountry, this book follows the "loser" son that returns home to tragedy, not only for his family but the inevitable erosion of lowcountry plantations and traditions. For anyone living near the coast or from the coast of South Carolina, it is an honest, eye-opener about what is really happening to this area of the state.

"The Lovely Bones" by Alice Sebold
A chilling story about a young girl lured into an underground bunker (which right now is scaringly similar to real incidents in the news) and what happens to her. The story is told by the young girl who cannot fully rest until her murder is solved.

"The Secret Life of Bees" by Sue Monk Kidd
Set in South Carolina in 1964, this follows what happens to a young girl after the death of her mother and an emotionally distant father, who decides to leave her home to find out about her mother's past based on something she found in a box of her mother's belongins. What follows is how this young girl ends up living with 3 black women in their home and how they become the only real family she has.

Saturday, July 22, 2006

Harlan Coben: "The Innocent" & James Grippando: "Lying with Strangers"

Both these books base themselves on do-gooders who prove that "no good dead goes unpunished".

In "The Innocent", you constantly are unsettled by the fact that an innocent person was unjustly accused and served time in jail, and how one mistake changed that "good" person's life forever. When after several years more bad things start to happen, he and his pregnant wife have to go beyond the law to try to figure out what is going on and both she and he discover some interesting facts about their lives prior. It has enough twists, turns and emotional upheavels to keep you unsettled the entire way through, and manages to lift you back up at the end so you feel everything has been set right.

In "Lying with Strangers" you also get that unsettled feeling of someone who you think is trying to do what is right but as with the "Shopaholic" books, a lot of what people see is not exactly what is happening so wrong assumptions are made that tend to tumble and escalate out of control. You just want to kick some of the characters in the pants, tell them to stop their running off with the wrong conclusions and wonder if it all will be set right in the end.

Iris Johansen - "Dead Aim" & "On The Run"

Is it obvious I am cleaning out the books that have accumulated and hidden on my bookshelf? "Dead Aim", published in 2003, this is a great page turner about a photo journalist who witnesses a crime beyond proportions while trying to photograph what appears to be a natural catastrophe. She and an unlikely person are paired together in a run for their lives as they discover more and more information that involves more people than just the average criminals.

"On the Run" puts a mother and daughter together in a run for their lives. It all ties back into the mother's interesting, yet dangerous past, and takes them from a small southern farm, to the wild west and across the world. Once again, the main character witnesses something but the real crime is hidden somewhere beneath what is seen, so for the entirety of the book she and her daughter don't exactly know what they are running from and towards. It keeps you guessing, as well as "Dead Aim".

Beach Road by James Patterson & Peter De Jonge

I finished this book in a few hours due to the short chapters. It is a good page turner set in the East Hamptons. It does not exactly have you guessing the entire book, until you get closer to the end and get a kick in the pants! It mixes up low income and wealthy in a community that could not survive without both and the interaction, trust and non-trusts, between the different classes of people. A good book club book.

James Patterson - "The 5th Horseman"

Part of the Womens Murder Club, "The 5th Horseman" is probably the 3rd or 4th one of this series I have read. But it doesn't matter if you read any of the previous novels to enjoy this one. It follows a crime committed and 4 somewhat unlikely friends whose lives in one way or another are touched by the crime, either personally or professionally. They manage to help solve the crime sometimes unbeknownest to each other and the puzzle pieces tend to fall together by the end of the novel. A fast-paced read and entertaining. The first book in the series is was made into a movie in 2003.

Sophia Kinsella:

This summer I read 3 more Sophia Kinsella books: "Can you keep a Secret?", "The Undomestic Goddess", and the 4th "Shopaholic" book, "Shopaholic and Sister". These books were just as enjoyable as the other 3 "Shopaholic" books, making me wish she had more. The writing style is exactly the same in all the books, the stories are similar but different, and seeing what type of predicaments the main characters get themselves into is hilarious.

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Magic Hour by Kristen Hannah & Looking for Peyton Place by Barbara Delinsky

A really, really good read...Magic Hour by Kristin Hannah. This book covers a child psychologist who is married to her profession, a mistake she made, and typical return to the hometown. However, it is rich in character development and very touching as a child that comes to the town from seemingly nowhere and how the town rallies around both the psychologist, who left the town feeling like an outcast and loner after high school, and the mature psychologist who has learned to accept herself.

Another book I read earlier in the year, Looking for Peyton Place by Barbara Delinsky, was an interesting look into the social impact that Grace Metalious had on both the steamy novel and the soap opera. It seemed a bit autobiographical, as apparently Grace Metalious was and still is a great inspiration to many an aspiring housewife/novelist. The book follows, and I feel I am repeating myself, a return to a hometown where the main character felt like an outcast and a loner so she left as soon as she could, but became extremely successful away from home. A tragedy occurs of some sort, she returns home and is constantly trying to fight the stereotyp of herself in her mind to become a fully-grown mature adult who accepts herself. Despite my sarcasm, the book was also very good and I would recommend both of these books for any avid reader.

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

More Nicholas Evans, Sue Monk Kidd, Janet Evanovich, etc.

Just after I read The Divide, I picked up "The Smoke Jumper" by Nicholas Evans. I has been sitting on my bookshelf for almost 5 years after I started to read The Loop and just couldn't get into it. The Smoke Jumper was excellent. The setting was basically the same as the other books and centered around the western United States horse country, but the depth of the characters was tremendous and the story pulled you in so that you did not want to put the book down. I liked this one so much, I put it back up on the bookshelf as a "keeper".

Another book club book, "10 Big Ones" by Janet Evanovich. I can't remember what the 10 had to do with the book, but it is part of the Stephanie Plum series and was set in Philadelphia. Now I have read several of Janet's books but I don't particularly remember reading any in this series. They start out at "One for the Money" and now the 12th book will be out in June '06. The book was a very quick read and a good escape for a few hours. Set in Philadelphia, it interested more than it probably would normally since I have just visited the city a few weeks earlier.

I picked up a book my daughter checked out of the library, as I was sitting in the car for several hours watching a softball game during cold weather. It was "Girl, 15, charming but insane" by Sue Limb. It reminded me of a mini "Shopaholic" or "Bridget Jones Diary" book so you really need to like and appreciate the British humor. It was absolutely delightful to read (it only took me a few hours), but it centered around a 15 year-old-girl whose parents were divorced but on friendly terms and the mess she gets herself into and out of.

"The Bonesetter's Daughter" by Amy Tan was just as wonderful as all her other books. Of course, it has the typical Chinese daughter for a traditional Chinese mother. This mother lives in the US but how she got there is an intricate tale of living in a small village and how she finally arrived in the states. Highly recommended on my list and I passed this one on to my mother to read.

"Good in Bed" by Jennifer Weiner was a book that had the playful feel of the british "Shopaholic" books and was a very enjoyable read (except I felt like I couldn't read it in public as I didn't want people to think I was reading a sex therapy book!). This novel follows the life of a slightly overweight woman who cannot get over the fact that she weighs too much and lets it permeate every aspect of her thinking.

Most recently I read "The Mermaid Chair" by Sue Monk Kidd. She is somewhat of a local author, really just in the same state as I am, but it was rich in low country/barrier island setting that makes you want to go back and read Pat Conroy's "The Water is Wide". The character development was rich also, but to make it believable you have to believe in love at first site.

The book at the moment is "girlology" by Melisa Holmes, MD and Trish Hutchison, MD. Melisa's daughter attends school with my daughter, so she was asked to speak to the parents of the 4th through 8th graders about the changes their children were going through at this time in their lives, both physically, emotionally and sexually. She brought a few of the books along and I bought one, thinking they were for parents of preteens. No, this book is for eleven year old girls and older but I decided to read it first so that if my daughter has any questions, she can ask me.

Monday, January 23, 2006

More Books

I've been busy reading through the Book Club books my mother gives me...Since The Coaches Daughter...It seems like that most of these books have a pathologist involved, so I am getting a bit tired of reading about autopsies...

Rebecca Wells,"Ya-Yas in Bloom", interesting to read if you read the "Divine Secrets" but it jumped around from person to person and time to time that it could have gone on and on. However, nowhere as good as the "Divine Secrets."

Karen Slaughter, "Indelible", is a good page turner. I didn't read the other two books of hers that included the same main characters, but it did not detract from knowing what was going on. I would like to go back and read "Blindsighted" and "Kisscut" though to read about their background.

Jilliane Hoffman, "Last Witness", was a bit on the crass side, I would guess because the writer is a former Assistant State Attorney and she was used to working with street cops and investigators, and these people must have been like that. This was a great read though, and of course as predictable of an ending as the other books I have listed here.

Catherine Coulter, "Point Blank", An FBI Thriller, is about her other FBI thriller books with the husband and wife team of Sherlock and Savich, but I didn't realize that I had read a previous novel about them until I got about half-way through the book. So once again, this book stands alone or can be read along with a series. It was a good page turner also, set in West Virginia.

Nicholas Evans, "The Divide", is the second book of Evans I have read, "The Horse Whisperer," being the first. This book was very much like "The Horse Whisperer", with hints of the west and horses and ranches, a horse "wreck" and a love story gone awry. I don't know what I was expecting when I read this, but maybe something a bit different. It was an enjoyable read also.

Tuesday, December 27, 2005

Book: The Coaches Daughter

I like to support local authors and saw this book at one of our few locally-owned book stores (I love to shop at The Open Book!). It is by Wandra Daniel McGowan.


I am no professional reviewer, but am an avid reader about a variety of subjects by a lot of different authors, but I am just going to put my general impressions here:


The book has 96 pages. It took me a little over an hour to read. The general storyline follows a tween's perspective on life when her father gets fired from his job and he eventually becomes a coach to a basketball team at an "at-risk" high school. Even though the story covers some heavy subjects, my logical mind kept trying to link the dates from her father's high school graduation to 2005. Since this was bothering me, I also noticed quite a few typos in the book (although I find those in most books I read!).


There are real photographs in the book, and my impression is that they were a bit hokey, as I think they were actually photos of the author's family that she was trying to tie into the story. Also, the impression I got from reading the back panel is that it was based on a true story, but then the coach graduated from high school in 1991, went to college, got his masters and was working on his doctorate, has a 12 -year-old daughter and then he retires from working 8 years later. Since this is now 2005, that would mean the coach would be about 32 right now, and he retires when he is 40?


As I was reading, I did think that the book could make a good discussion for a Sunday school lesson, and this book is her first published material that she probably had to pay herself to have published. So if you want a quick read and want to support some local to South Carolina, then that would be the reason to get this book.