Friday, December 30, 2005

#2 Uglies by Scott Westerfeld / Shared Reading with Layla!***


My daughter Layla and I have decided to start doing some shared reading and I'm really looking forward to this! She has chosen our first read, Uglies by Scott Westerfeld. I'm already searching for our next read. I would really like to chose something that Layla will really love. However, it's quite overwhelming.

01/27/06 Finally finished this one and it turned out to be better than I expected! I look forward to reading the next book in this series, Pretties.

Tuesday, December 27, 2005

Brokeback Mountain by Annie Proulx #54 ****

I was able to squeeze in one more read for 2005. A short story by Annie Proulx. This was a gift from my daughter Layla for X-mas. It is originally from a short story collection called Close Range.

I really loved this story! It reminded me a little of Cormac McCarthy's work (All The Pretty Horses).

Ennis del Mar and Jack Twist, two ranch hands, come together when they're working as sheepherder and camp tender one summer on a range above the tree line. At first, sharing an isolated tent, the attraction is casual, inevitable, but something deeper catches them that summer.

Both men work hard, marry, and have kids because that's what cowboys do. But over the course of many years and frequent separations this relationship becomes the most important thing in their lives, and they do anything they can to preserve it.

On a side note regarding the movie. I was listening to the Jay Thomas show on Sirius radio and they have been discussing the movie. They actually interviewed the Mayor of Casper, Wyoming, Guy Padgett.

Friday, December 23, 2005

Author Alphabet Challenge 2006

An idea was suggested on The Fiction Lovers message board at iVillage that we try a "new to you" author challenge. The idea is to try to read one new author for each letter of the alphabet. So thought I'd give it a go and keep track in this post.

A
B = Beard, Philip Dear Zoe
C = Cook, Claire Must Love Dogs
C = Colas, Emily Just Checking
D = Dallas, Sandra, The Persian Pickle Club
E = Estes, Winston M. Another Part of the House
E = Erian, Alicia Towelhead
E = Evanovich, Janet One For The Money
E = Edwards, Kim The Memory Keepers Daughter
F = Flock, Elizabeth Me & Emma
F = Farmer, Nancy The House of the Scorpion
G
H = Hautman, Pete Godless
H = Hunt, Irene Across Five Aprils
I = Isaacs, Susan Compromising Positions
J = Jackson, Joshilyn Gods in Alabama
K = Keyes, Marian Watermelon
L = Leavitt, Caroline Girls in Trouble
L = Lindsay, Jeff Darkly Dreaming Dexter
L = L'Engle, Madeleine A Wrinkle in Time
M = Myers, Walter Dean, Monster
N = Nolan, Han Send Me Down A Miracle
O
P = Packer, Ann The Dive From Clausen's Pier
Q
R = Rosoff, Meg How I Live Now
S = Spark, Muriel The Finishing School
S = Sandford, John Rules of Prey
S = Saul, John Perfect Nightmare
T = Tucker, Lisa Shout Down The Moon
T = Tropper, Jonathan The Book Of Joe
U
V = Voigt, Cynthia Homecoming
W = Westerfeld, Scott Uglies
W = White, Kate If Looks Could Kill
W = Weeks, Sarah So B. It
W = Wilde, Oscar The Importance of Being Earnest
W = Wiesel, Elie Night
Z

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides

Temporarily put on hold, will get back to this one soon.
This will be my first fiction read of 2006. I'm very anxious to get to it; heard a lot of good things about this book.

From the back cover: Middlesex tells the breathtaking story of Calliope Stephanides and three generations of the Greek-American Stephanides family, who travel from a tiny village overlooking Mount Olympus in Asia Minor to Prohibiton-era Detroit, witnessing its glory days as the Motor City, and the race riots of 1967, before they move out to the tree-lined streets of suburban Grosse Pointe, Michigan. To understand why Calliope is not like other girls, she has to uncover a guilty family secret, and the astonishing genetic history that turns Callie into Cal, one of the most audacious and wondrous narrators in contemporary fiction. Lyrical and thrilling, Middlesex is an exhilarating reinvention of the American Epic.

Monday, December 19, 2005

Start Where You Are by Pema Chodron

Hope to get back to this one!

This is going to be my first nonfiction read of the new year.

Pema Chodron is a Buddhist nun for regular folks. Having raised a family of her own, she doesn't shy away from persistent troubles and the basic meatiness of life. In fact, in Start Where You Are, Chodron tries to get us to see that the faults and foibles in each of us now are the perfect ingredients for creating a better life. No need to wait for a quieter time or a more settled mind. The trick Chodron says is to repattern ourselves, to transform bad habits into good by first opening ourselves to the groundlessness of existence. When the cliff dissolves beneath our feet, fear has a way of actually lessening. Fearlessness opens the way to recognizing our pushy egos and that rather than being cursed with original sin, we are blessed with an original soft spot--the squishy feeling inside that we all have, that is the seat of true compassion, and that we all do our best to armor over. Chodron is the kind of teacher who has seen it all and keeps pushing us back into ourselves until there's no one left to wrestle with but a certain recalcitrant image in the mirror. Excerpt from Amazon

Wednesday, December 14, 2005

Worst Reads of 2005


The Genesis Code by John Case. I think this was suppose to ride on the coat tales of the DaVinci Code which I haven't read yet. Actually a good story idea but too much filler stuff. If your main character is going for a jog they need to have some really insightful thoughts or earth shattering break through that is relevant to the story.

The Five People You Meet In Heavenby Mitch Albom. Sorry this just didn't do it for me. I can see how some people found it touching or inspiring though.

Haunted by Heather Graham. I have read Graham in the past; back when I wasn't so cynical about love and romance I suppose. Back then she wrote "historical romance" which were fun but I quickly out grew. So I thought I'd give her a try since she appeared to do a genre switch as many romance authors have done. So, Haunted was about a contemporary haunted house that, get this, was haunted by civil war ghosts. Doh! Same story just different place and different time. This kind of thing really bugs me for some reason. I suppose that there will always be an audience of this genre and author, however, you'd think she would want to grow along with her readers.


The Summer I Dared by Barbara Delinsky. *yawn* The title and cover didn't live up to my expectations. I nice sweet book I think my mother would have liked to read.


Friday, December 09, 2005

Whispers by Dean Koontz #53



Synopsis from Amazon

This is a highly suspenseful book, written in clear, spare prose. It is an easy read and a definite page turner. It is a plot driven book, however, with little character development.
The plot itself is simple. A beautiful screenwriter, Hilary Thomas, is confronted in her own home by an intruder named Bruno Frye. It seems that Mr. Frye has been stalking Ms. Thomas in the belief that Ms. Thomas is his long deceased mother, Katherine, who has ostensibly come back from the dead in order to kill him. He feels that he must kill her, before she kills him.

Of course, Ms. Thomas has no clue as to why Frye has singled her out. She is aware only of his murderous intent, and she is afraid, very afraid. On Frye's first go around with Ms. Thomas, she survives. On the second go around, Frye does not. Thinking herself to be safe, as Frye has seemingly gone to his maker, she is shocked when he, yet again, confronts her with deadly intent.

Why this is happening and how, will certainly keep the reader turning the pages. Some of it is predictable, but it, nonetheless, makes for an absorbing, easy read. This is one of the author's better, early efforts. Readers who enjoy suspenseful novels will not be disappointed.

12/20/05 Quote Eugene Tucker: "You aren't a man until you accept responsibility for your life. A lot of people never do." Makes me think of my 18 year-old son. Looking forward to the day he will get this!

12/28/05 Aaack! I'm really trying to like Dean Koontz. This was better than the first book I read, Watchers. I find his characters a little too perfect. Meaning they are sensitive and good. Readily admit to there faults; that really aren't faults at all. Martyrs. Also, Koontz holds the readers hand too much. Some things the reader needs to figure out on their own. Repeating detail over and over is just a waste of space and time. I get that Hillary had a bad childhood and this is revisited several times. I'm going to give Icebound a try by Koontz and if it doesn't do it for me I'm going to pass on Koontz.

Proof a play by David Auburn #52



Synopsis from Amazon

Adult/High School-Twenty-five-year-old Catherine, who sacrificed college to care for her mentally ill father (once a brilliant, much-admired mathematician), is left in a kind of limbo after his death. Socially awkward and a bit of a shut-in, she is gruff with Hal, a former student who shows up even before the funeral wanting to root through the countless notebooks her father kept in the years of his decline, hoping to find mathematical gold. On the heels of his arrival comes Claire, Catherine's cosmopolitan, blandly successful, and pushy sister, with plans to sell their father's house and take Catherine (whom she's convinced has inherited a touch of their father's illness) with her back to New York. Catherine does not want to leave, and things become more complicated as she and Hal tentatively begin to develop a relationship. She gives him the key to a drawer in her father's desk, where the "gold" waits-in the form of a notebook filled with the most original and astonishing mathematical proof Hal has seen in years. Thrilled, he wants to take immediate steps to have the proof published in her father's name, until Catherine shocks both him and Claire by declaring that she is its author. Hal's harsh incredulity pushes Catherine into an indifferent funk, sorely disappointed by the insult of having to prove her honesty to a friend she had trusted. There is much to appeal to YAs in this Pulitzer Prize- and Tony Award-winning play, which crackles with subtle wit while tackling large questions

Monday, December 05, 2005

The Kitchen Witch by Annette Blair***


#51
Amazon book description:
Set in Old Salem around the Halloween season, this charming romantic comedy features a wacky, if good-hearted, self-proclaimed witch and her upstairs neighbor, a reformed bad boy trying to be a responsible father to his adorable four-year-old son, Shane. Needing a reliable baby sitter, Logan Kilgarven agrees to an exchange: he will find a job for Melody at the local TV station, where he is a producer, and she will be on call to baby sit Shane as needed. Melody, however, spurns his offer of a secretarial position, countering with a bid for a cooking show. The catch? Melody can't cook. At all. But with a combination of sex appeal and well-developed marketing skills, she sells the station owner on the concept, and several spicy encounters in elevators and on counters and desktops are the inevitable result. With both of them fighting their feelings, and several matchmakers as well as one marplot stirring the cauldron, Blair has crafted a fun and sexy romp. Lynne Welch

12/09/05

Well I haven't read a book like this in a long time. I have since become a bit cynical in regards to love and romance. However, it eventually sucked me in and turned out to be fun read.