Saturday, July 31, 2010

In My Mailbox





In My Mailbox

This is a fun weekly meme initiated by The Story Siren. You simply post about what books you have received during the week no matter the source--library, purchased, borrowed, etc.

If you’re new to In My Mailbox welcome! Thank you to everyone who stops by In My Mailbox . Whether you comment or visit I appreciate your taking the time to drop in.

Monday July 26

The Replacement by Brenna Yovanoff (Penguin)

Nightshade by Andrea Cremer (Penguin)

Sapphique by Catherine Fisher (Penguin)

The Monkey Bible by Mark Laxer (Outer Rim Press)

2034 by Robert Renfield (Eloqent Books)


Friday July 30

Out of the Translyvania Night by Aura Imbarus (Bettie Youngs Books)

My Only Sunshine by Lou Dischler (Hub City Books)

Because Memory Isn’t Eternal: A Story of Greeks in Upstate South Carolina by Deno Trakas (Hub City Press)

Strangers at the Feast by Jennifer Vanderbes (Scribner)

Man in the Woods by Scott Spencer (Ecco)

The Lexical Funk: A triumph of words by Daniel Clausen (Lulu)


Saturday July 31

The Trees by John Fowles (Ecco)

Shadow of the Swords by Kamran Pasha (won from Alyce At Home with Books)

I’m going to have to get a bigger mailbox with all these books coming in at one time. My poor mailman is probably cursing me as I write this.

Have a great Monday and Happy Reading.

Page

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Lobsterland Review



Book description from Amazon:

Tourists may think life on an island off the coast of Maine is quaint, but Charlotte knows better. She’s tired of her island prison (it has a real name, but she calls it “Bleak”), and she’s sure that a life in the great anywhere-else is heaps better than one that revolves around catching a ferry to the mainland. She even has the perfect solution: boarding school.

But who will take care of the siblets? Will clinically crazy Mom or organic-obsessed Dad be able to hold things together without her there? And is Charlotte ready to leave love-of-her-life Noah behind?

This was a fun book to read. I, like Charlotte, grew up in a small town and understand why she dreams of life elsewhere. She dreams of living Bleak, Maine for boarding school and a better life.

She has the struggles all teenagers have between wanting to sleep with her first love, which someone beats her to that and taking care of her “siblets” because her lawyer mom is sometimes around, but drugged up with psychiatric meds.

When Charlotte is preparing to catch the ferry to mail off her apps for boarding schools she thinks:

I head to the door and , because I’m me, divert to thinking of doorknobs. Making a choice means not only opening a door but walking through. I’m good at looking at doors. At scrutinizing the hinges and condemning the colors. But actually the knob (brass or bronze or pewter or chrome) and committing to a future I’ve actually chosen. Well, it’s a whole new concept.

If you know a teen who dreams of life elsewhere I recommend this book for them. It may help them make that decision and not regret the choice.

I received this book free from the author Susan Carlton for a review.

Happy Reading Everyone.

Page

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Teaser Tuesday




Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by MizB ofShould Be Reading. Anyone can play along! Just do the following:

  • Grab your current read
  • Open to a random page
  • Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page
  • BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
  • Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers!
  • Today mine is from the book Lobster land by Susan Carlton
  • "Snow is the great Liquid Paper. It obliterates mistakes, blurs edges.
Happy Reading everybody.

Page

Monday, July 26, 2010

Mailbox Monday


Mailbox Monday is the gathering place for readers to share the books that came into their house last week. Warning: Mailbox Monday can lead to envy, toppling TBR piles and humongous wish lists.

If you’re new to Mailbox Monday welcome! Thank you to everyone who stops by Mailbox Monday. Whether you comment or visit I appreciate your taking the time to drop in.


Only one book came into my house last week. Hopefully this week will bring more goodies.


Lobsterland by Susan Carlton
Book description from Amazon

Tourists may think life on an island off the coast of Maine is quaint, but Charlotte knows better. She’s tired of her island prison (it has a real name, but she calls it “Bleak”), and she’s sure that a life in the great anywhere-else is heaps better than one that revolves around catching a ferry to the mainland. She even has the perfect solution: boarding school.

But who will take care of the siblets? Will clinically crazy Mom or organic-obsessed Dad be able to hold things together without her there? And is Charlotte ready to leave love-of-her-life Noah behind?

Have a good Monday. Happy Reading.

Page

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Ramona Quimby

Ramona Quimby: The Mischievous Girl Next Door

text size A A A
July 23, 2010

Fans of Ramona Quimby are either dreading or delighting in the fact that their feisty young heroine has gone Hollywood. The movie Ramona and Beezus comes out today, with Disney Channel star Selena Gomez as big sister Beezus and newcomer Joey King as Ramona.

Ramona first appeared in the 1950s, as a minor character in Beverly Cleary's Henry Huggins books. She was the pest, the well-intentioned trouble-maker, and she would prove such a force of nature that Cleary gave Ramona her own series, eight books in all.

When Cleary created the character Ramona, she thought of a little girl from her childhood who lived in a house behind hers in Portland, Ore. She remembers the day she saw the little girl on the sidewalk.

"She had been sent to the neighborhood store for a pound of butter," says Cleary. "In those days, it was all in one piece, not in cubes. And she had opened the butter and was eating it."

Ramona Quimby would definitely eat butter straight from the slab. In fact, Ramona would do a lot worse. Just ask her fans, like 7-year-old Adia Keene from Washington, D.C.

"Once she colored in the book on purpose so she wouldn't have to turn the book back in," says Keene.

Ella Biehle, 6 and a half and living in San Anselmo, Calif., liked the time Ramona made a crown out of prickly burrs.

"And her hair got stuck and she looked really funny," Biehle laughs.

Twelve-year-old Erinn Blessinger knows a lot about Ramona's creator. She lives in Cleary's old neighborhood in Portland, attended Beverly Cleary Elementary School, even appeared as Ramona in a school play.

"Ramona blurts out a lot of stuff that she might want to take back," says Blessinger.

'A Girl Learning How To Grow Up'

The Ramona and Beezus movie was directed by Elizabeth Allen, a big Beverly Cleary fan who worked on the script with the 94-year-old author. She says Cleary is a "tough cookie."

When the two first met, Allen says, "I sat down and I thought it was going to be this moment where we were gonna hug each other and talk about the properties. Instead she whipped out her notebook and said 'So, what are the themes of Ramona?'"

Allen gave it her best shot.


"She has an imagination," Beverly Cleary says of her most famous creation. "And some of her things just don't turn out the way she expected.""I said, 'I feel it's about girl who thinks outside the lines, who's struggling to figure out how to conform without losing her personality,'" Allen says. "And Beverly felt strongly that it was actually just about a girl learning how to grow up."

Those "things" often get Ramona in trouble, and then make her feel misunderstood.

Elizabeth Allen believes Cleary is a writer who has a way of getting into a child's head. But Cleary says she's just lucky.

"I have very clear memories of childhood," says the author.

But Cleary's memories growing up in Portland in the 1920s and 30s are not all mischievous fun. Some are pretty painful — and they've found their way into Cleary's books. Take the time Ramona's dad comes home from work looking especially beleaguered. Ramona immediately assumes it's something she did. But this time, Mr. Quimby has lost his job — just as Cleary's own father did, when she was a little girl.

"I was embarrassed," says Cleary. "I didn't know how to talk to my father. I know he felt so terrible at that time. I guess I felt equally terrible. I think adults sometimes don't think about how children are feeling about the adult problems."

Maybe part of what has made Ramona Quimby popular generation after generation is that she's believable. Cleary says she gets hundreds of letters from children — and some adults — who say "I am Ramona."

They've also been asking her for a Ramona movie for years. Now they've got one.


Page

Friday, July 23, 2010

I won

Thanks to Tina at Tutu's two cents I won this book.

Book description:

Laurie Sandell grew up in awe (and sometimes in terror) of her larger-than-life father, who told jaw-dropping tales of a privileged childhood in Buenos Aires, academic triumphs, heroism during Vietnam, friendships with Kissinger and the Pope. As a young woman, Laurie unconsciously mirrors her dad, trying on several outsized personalities (Tokyo stripper, lesbian seductress, Ambien addict). Later, she lucks into the perfect job–interviewing celebrities for a top women’s magazine. Growing up with her extraordinary father has given Laurie a knack for relating to the stars. But while researching an article on her dad’s life, she makes an astonishing discovery: he’s not the man he says he is–not even close. Now, Laurie begins to puzzle together three decades of lies and the splintered person that resulted from them–herself.

Scheduled for release late July 2009


Happy Reading!

Page

Suite Scarlett audio book Review





Book description from Amazon.com:

The Hopewell Hotel, 75 years ago a stylish Upper East Side haunt, has fallen on hard times. Its proprietors, the Martin family, have let the last remaining employee go, and now it’s up to the four children, Spencer, Lola, Scarlett, and Marlene, to keep things afloat. Enter one Mrs. Amy Amberson, a flamboyant, mysterious guest, back in New York after a long absence, with some clandestine motives. Mrs. Amberson is to occupy the Empire Suite, just today entrusted to Scarlett as a “present” on her fifteenth birthday (a family tradition), for the entire summer, and keeping her happy will test Scarlett’s ingenious mettle. What follows is some utterly winning, madcap Manhattan farce, crafted with a winking, urbane narrative and tight, wry dialogue. Beneath the silvered surface, Johnson delivers a complex sibling relationship.. Grades 7-12.

I received the audio book of this from a giveaway at Trisha’s blog eclectic/eccrentic. Usually I have trouble following a fiction audio book, but this one was fun and I may try to listen to more fiction on audio.

Scarlett goes through a lot of things in one summer starting with having a guest to be in charge of, as is the rule when a Martin turns 15, and is given a room to take care of. This was a fun story full of adventure, humor and you really feel Scarlett’s anguish and angst at trying to do the right thing and manage to stay sane. The reader of this audio book (Jeannie Stith ) does a great job of changing voices and making the story fun. I would recommend this audio book and the book as a fun read for the whole family. There are references to drinking and smoking, but otherwise a wholesome family book.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

P.D. James solves the mystery of living a full life

I was browsing the online newspapers and came across this article about P.D. James in USA Today. I hope you enjoy it and have a great day.

Happy Reading!

Page

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Musings meme


Musings
This is where I'll put ideas or items I feel of interest to my readers. I hope to do this every week. If you would like to use this for your blog, feel free, just leave me a link to your post.

Hello everyone,
I was thinking the other day and have seen posts on other blogs about what makes us choose the books we read. Do you go by the cover, the blurb on the book jacket, reviews, what? I use a little of all of them, especially if it's an author that is new to me. I read reviews and make a list of the books I think I might like to read and sometimes the books turn out to be as good as the reviews and sometimes not.
Now that I review books to help others decide if they want to read it, I understand how difficult it is. You want to make the book appealing, but you don't want to give too much away. I have worked in a library for over 20 years, so I'm used to recommending books to people. One of the hardest things is when someone asks, "Can you recommend a good book"? The problem lies in what you think is good because I may not mind sex or cursing, but my reader might, so it can make things difficult.
That's what I've been musing over. Let me know what you think and thanks for stopping by. Have a great day.

Happy Reading Everybody!

Page

Monday, July 19, 2010

Mailbox Monday

Mailbox Monday is a meme to share with our fellow bloggers and followers what arrived in our houses recently.

Here's what I got last week:

From Cafe Press a license plate frame "A Great Book is the Best of Friends"
Mackenzie Blue series by Tina Wells from Harper Collins
One Day by David Nicholls from Random House

What came into your house recently?

Happy Reading!

Page

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Apocalyptic Fiction

Lately I've noticed a lot of movies that are coming out that deal with the world after an apocalypse and decided to make a list of literature that deals with that subject. See if you've read any of these books.



Apocalyptic ficton

(If you liked The Road by Cormac McCarthy try these books)

Girlfriend in a coma by Douglas Coupland

Fight Club by Chuck Palahniuk

In the country of last things by Paul Auster

Amnesia moon by Jonathan Lethem

The second coming by Walker Percy

Damnation alley by Roger Zelazny

Ice age by Brian Freemantle

The grail conspiracy by Lynn Sholes

Armageddon’s children by Terry Brooks

Nemesis by Bill Napier

The stone god by Jeanette Winterson

One second after by William Forstchen

The passage by Justin Cronin

Happy Reading.


Page

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Mackenzie Blue series review

This series by Tina Wells is great for girls that are not sure what to expect in the seventh grade. I was contacted by an agent for Tina to read the third book in the series, but hadn't read the two previous novels, so the publisher send me all three.

I loved this series because Mackenzie Blue, aka "Zee" is smart and funny. Zee is nervous about seventh grade at Brookdale Academy because her BFF Ally has moved to Paris, France. She soon develops new friendships and has to decide how to handle many different situations. In the first book she has to handle someone stealing her diary and writing things from it in on the board at school.

The second book Secret Crush deals with her classmates learning how to work together as a team to produce a school musical and Zee gets the lead opposite her "crush" Landon.

The third book Friends Forever? her classmates go on a camping trip where they have no cell phone coverage, no IMing and roughing it is not in their vocabulary.

This series is great for girls who are afraid of being different and not making friends. I love Zee and how she learns to think for herself, sure she makes mistakes, but she also make amends and admits when she's wrong.

The author also puts a "glossary" of IM terms for those who may not know what BFF is.

I want to thank Mallory and Harper Collins for introducing these books to me. These books were sent to me free of charge for my review.

Happy Reading!

Page





Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Teaser Tuesday



Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by MizB ofShould Be Reading. Anyone can play along! Just do the following:

  • Grab your current read
  • Open to a random page
  • Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page
  • BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
  • Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers!
Mine is from the upcoming book by Sena Jeter Naslund Adam & Eve
He handed me the pears, and then with his hand he removed spears of aloe, having transported them clamped between his ribs and the inside of his upper arm, though I'd not noticed them at first. He had come to me like a painting from the Renaissance--a man whose body was composed of vegetables.

Monday, July 12, 2010

Guest Post - Emma Campion on writing The King's Mistress

Guest blog—for As the page turns, Page Inman

Searching for Alice: Writing The King’s Mistress

Why did Alice Perrers get under my skin?

I began to write historical fiction out of the same curiosity that lures me to science fiction, fantasy, and non-fiction about cultures very different from my own: I enjoy exploring how it might be to live in another place, another time, a different culture, even a mythical or completely invented society or planet. In grad school, the early languages I studied—old Norse, old Icelandic, Anglo-Saxon (old English)—nudged me to change my perspective, for the way a culture expresses itself in language gives a glimpse into its philosophy, psychology, collective unconscious. Indeed, I think this is true for any language other than one’s own.

I’m curious about what the people were thinking, what motivated them. And I enjoy digging into details of daily life. I begin to generate questions faster than I can answer them, and it becomes the thrill of the chase.

And Alice has led me a merry chase.

Until very recently, the accepted version of Alice’s story was thus: Alice Perrers was the “notorious” mistress of King Edward III, mother of his son John de Southery and his daughters Joan and Jane, and condemned by two sequential Parliaments in 1376–1377 for her influence over the king. Through remarkable business acumen she accrued a fortune in land worthy of a duke and earned the animosity of the commons. She was married twice, to Janyn Perrers sometime before 1360 and to William Wyndsor after the king’s death. She died circa 1400. Historians accepted her reputation as a gold digger, basing their opinions on the monk Thomas Walsingham’s venomous portrait of her: “There was a woman in England called Alice Perrers. She was a shameless, impudent harlot, and of low birth…. She was not attractive or beautiful, but knew how to compensate for these defects by her seductive voice. Blind fortune elevated this woman to such heights and promoted her to a greater intimacy with the king than was proper, since she had been the maidservant and mistress of a man of Lombardy…. Even while the queen was still alive, the king loved this woman more than he loved the queen.”

As so many generations of historians before me, I’d used this version of Alice in some early projects. But once I’d gone into enough depth in researching women in 14th century England I doubted the essentials of the story. A commoner gaining control of such a powerful and popular king?

The more I delved into Edward III’s court the more preposterous the story seemed. How could an orphan with no powerful patrons take over the reins of government and even go so far as to succeed in controlling access to the king himself despite his living heir being the immensely popular war hero Edward of Woodstock, the Black Prince? Not to mention the wealthy, ambitious, powerful younger son, John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, who many believed manipulated his father behind the scenes. This fit neither the political reality nor human nature. But bits of the story did suggest that Alice Perrers was someone the prince and the duke found useful.

I am fortunate to be a part of a lively community of scholars in late medieval studies—history, literature, and culture—and even more fortunate to have earned their respect. So although I’ve chosen to use my background to write novels, I’m invited to present papers on my ongoing research as well as to contact them with questions or to get feedback on my ideas. They also share their research with me. What I heard when I began to poke around about Alice’s story was that even the most respected archivists could find little to support the stories about her other than the facts recorded regarding parliament’s accusations and an inventory of her properties, some gifts from the royal family, and her jewels. They agreed with me that the trail of attempts to pin down what branch of Perrers claimed her was a study in desperation.

And then…. One sunny afternoon during an academic conference I was headed to the book exhibit and then a long walk, but changed my mind at the last minute and slipped into a session about advances in archival research. The historian Chris Given-Wilson, who had shared with me his extensive research on Alice, had suggested I also talk to W.M (Mark) Ormrod, and I’d just noticed he was the first presenter. I still get chills up my spine about that sudden about face. What if I’d missed the session and no one had thought to fill me in about it until I was too far along in the manuscript to change course?

Mark, then director of the Centre for Medieval Studies at the University of York, was demonstrating the benefits we’d all reap from the ambitious digitizing project he was managing at the National Archives in London. The example he projected onto the wall was one of a series of court petitions that had neither been transcribed nor indexed in all the centuries they had sat, small strips of parchment tied in bundles, in the Public Records Office in London. This particular petition turned my research upside down and inside out. Dated 1377, a John “Kendale requests payment of £4 15s 7d owed to him by Alice Perers for various parcels of cloth sold to Janyn Perers, Alice's former husband, in 34 Edward III (1360-1).”

Perrers was her married name. Friends in the room turned to see my reaction, and by their expressions I realized I must have been a stunning shade of crimson. It was a game changer.

I talked to Mark at length afterward. He, too, was excited about this new angle on Alice’s origins, and began to dig and to publish his findings in scholarly journals, discussing his research with me as he went along. Her early life shifted into a more feasible shape than the previous theories—she was the widow of a wealthy London merchant. It fit with records I’d found of her own land transactions before she went to court, and of a John Perrers likely to have been her father-in-law who’d provided costly cloth for King Edward III’s coronation. A court connection.

Colleagues more familiar with parliament records suggested that the commons’ attack on her was extreme. I began to read about scapegoats. Someone mentioned a paper they’d once heard in which it was pointed out how careful Edward III’s household must have been to hide from the public and most of the court the king’s increasing debility from what appeared to be a series of strokes. I began to see the shape of a more plausible story. How useful she might be to Edward’s busy sons. I kept returning to her loyalty. She stayed with Edward to the bitter end. I just could not imagine a woman as wily and greedy as Alice had been depicted staying by Edward’s side when it was clear that he was dying and there appeared to be no one stepping up to protect her. At one time I’d thought that person was William Wyndsor, but the records clearly pointed to that being a romantic fantasy. Alice was a woman alone when the king grew close to death. And yet she stayed by his side.

By the time I focused on writing The King’s Mistress I had a quite different vision of Alice than I’d had when I’d begun, and I’d come to admire her.

I didn’t set out to write the book in first person. But I had one more surprise: writing the novel in first person, in Alice’s voice. I kept drifting into her point of view. I’d spend the first few minutes of each writing day revising it to third person, but by mid-morning I would have drifted back into first person. I know better than to struggle against the flow. So I finally gave in. Writing it this way limited me, but I’ve come to think it’s fitting to have given Alice her own voice. I prefer the ambiguity of several points of view, but the book has its own ambiguity, my conceit that Alice is writing her story for her children. How might her story have differed if she’d intended it for a different audience? I’ll leave that for you to ponder.