Sunday, September 07, 2008

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society

I have been sick and this book was exactly what I needed for a long weekend home in bed. It creates a very good feeling--that there are lots of people out there willing to help their neighbor at their own expense. Has me questioning why I don't know my neighbors very well, and why so much has changed in neighborhoods in general. Anyway, it is very uplifting and has some really funny moments. All about post WWII and how the people cheered themselves up. Nice little romance in it also.

I have read many books in the last few days, but another of note is And Only to Deceive by Tasha Alexander. I picked it up because it said lovers of Anne Perry and Elizabeth Peters would enjoy it. It did not disappoint. Suspenseful and romantic historical novel. Full of feisty women who break the rules etc.

Sunday, July 13, 2008

"Chester" (It's a Cat's World)

I heard about this from Nancy Pearl on one of her NPR spots. Here is the Amazon description:
"Chester is more than a picture book. It is a story told and retold by dueling author-illustrators. Melanie Watt starts out with the story of a mouse in a house. Then Melanie's cat, Chester, sends the mouse packing and proceeds to cover the pages with rewrites from his red marker, and the gloves are off. Melanie and her mouse won't take Chester's antics lying down. And Chester is obviously a creative powerhouse with confidence to spare. Where will this war of the picture-book makers lead? Is it a one-way ticket to Chesterville, or will Melanie get her mouse production off the ground?"
The cat even crosses Melanie's name off the cover and prints "Chester" in the author's place. ;-)

Coincidently, I am writing this while sitting on the floor of the apartment, as Edmund took my only chair.

Friday, June 13, 2008

The Uncommon Reader



I think someone recommended this already, but I don't remember who. It is a very quick read by Alan Bennett. The book is about Queen Elizabeth II finding out how fun reading is. She begins to read everything and annoy her staff. Here is a quick excerpt I thought some of you would enjoy.

"The librarian at Windsor had been one of many who had urged on Her Majesty the charms of Jane Austen, but being told on all sides how much ma'am would like her books put ma'am off altogether. Besides, she had handicaps as a reader of Jane Austen that were particularly her own. The essence of Jane Austen lies in minute social distinctions, distinctions which the Queen's unique position made it difficult for her to grasp. There was such a chasm between the monarch and even her grandest subject that the social differences beyond that were somewhat telescoped. So the social distinctions of which Jane Austin made so much seemed of even less consequence to the Queen than they did to the ordinary reader, thus making the novels much harder going. To begin with, at any rate, Jane Austen was practically a work of entomology, the characters not quite ants but seeming to the royal reader so much alike as to require a microscope. It was only as she gained in understanding of both literature and human nature that they took on individuality and charm."

For another excerpt from this book visit petrified.

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Kansas Bookseller in the news!

So the guy from our own Rainy Day Books was on Morning Edition! Here is the story--it is full of great looking book recommends. Everything these 3 booksellers recommended sounded GREAT! But especially the ones that our Kansas guy talked about. Not that I'm biased.

Saturday, May 24, 2008

Email from BJ

since it has been a year or more since i have posted on the book blog, i now don't know how to do it. i have a great book I'd like to post called Three Cups of Tea.

http://www.amazon.com/Three-Cups-Tea-Mission-Promote/dp/0143038257/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1211590121&sr=8-1

the book is a nonfiction account of a guy named Greg Mortenson went from being a mountain climber to creating a non-profit organization dedicated to building secular schools in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

i'd love it if you could throw this up there for me!

love,
bj

Saturday, May 17, 2008

A Mystery of Errors

For all you mystery lovers, try Simon Hawke's A Mystery of Errors. It is very funny and one of the main characters is Will Shakespeare! There were many references that I caught, and I am sure many more that I didn't. Here is a little of the author's own explanation from the afterword:

"It may be thought the height of arrogance to use William Shakespeare as a fictional character in a novel, and I imagine there will probably be those who will curl their lips with disdain at the idea, but at the same time, I have a strong suspicion that Shakespeare would have approved, or at the very least, been rather amused by the whole thing. After all, it is precisely the sort of thing he did himself."

Monday, May 12, 2008

Skippyjon Jones in the Doghouse

Maci went to the bookstore with Leah, Stella, and Madeline this weekend. Leah read the new Skippyjon Jones to Stella and Maci. These books are a hoot. We brought "Skippyjon Jones in the Doghouse" home with us. Maci thinks is it great. She picked right up on the clapping to the songs (just after seeing Stella do it once).

Monday, March 31, 2008

NY Times Article

Well it's not a book review, but I thought this article in the NY Times was very interesting.

Also, because it made me remember when I was first dating Adolfo and saw that he had "The Fountainhead" on his bookshelf. When I asked him about it, he responded that it had been a gift and he never read it. Phew!

Saturday, March 29, 2008

The Abstinence Teacher

I just read this book by Tom Parrotta. It was a different kind of book for me as there was no mystery. It was a book about people and the troubles some of them face. One main character was a health teacher (middle school) who responded to a student comment about oral sex "some people enjoy it." The fallout from that was kind of maddening. The other main character is a born again Christian who had been a doper in college. The politics and sociology of these two matching up was well done.

Monday, March 17, 2008

Funny Fiction List Request

Ok, I looked online, but it is not listed. It's a 3 page pamphlet (front and back!) so I'm not likely to type them all in. But my library does have an EXCELLENT "find a good book" webpage. Check it out if you're stuck for something good to read.

Sunday, March 09, 2008

Funny Fiction part II

The Stately Home Murder. Could have been funny but not enough character development. Not a bad mystery though.

Emma by Jane Austen. Hilarious of course! I read this one already awhile back, but I may be reading it again just fun for. I was thinking of re-reading all the Austens this summer.

Saturday, March 08, 2008

Royal Flash, From the Flashman Papers

Take a peek at this book. I found it on a "Funny Fiction" List from my library. It was indeed funny. I am not sure about an excerpt, since the main character is a little... well, himself and not always appropriate. In fact rarely appropriate, but very funny. He is a MAJOR coward who has been decorated for bravery in war (I am planning on reading the first book to find out how that happened) and he looks at every situation in a way that provides the best outcome for HIM. Fortunately the situations are ridiculous. Funny adventure book.

Also read off the funny books list:

Faith Fox (not funny)

Mapp and Lucia (very funny! Hurrah it's also a series!)

Monday, February 25, 2008

Percy Jackson


Madeline brought this home from school. I love to read a good kid book and picked it right up. We have both read through book three now, "The Titan's Curse" and are having a great time. These remind me of Artemis Fowl, by E. Colfer and Harry Potter. We have already pre-ordered the next one coming out in May.
Percy Jackson is a middle school boy who finds out his dad is Poseidon. It turns out this is why he has such bad ADHD, :-). He goes off to a camp for kids who have both a mortal and an Olympian god as parents. He is pursued by monsters and greek gods and has to drag up a good deal of knowledge about the Greek gods to figure things out.
Here is what Booklist had to say:
From Booklist
*Starred Review* Just after finding Bianca and Nico, two newly discovered half-bloods, Percy, Grover, Annabeth, and Thalia end up trapped between a helicopter and a manticore. Artemis and her Hunters save the day, but Annabeth disappears over a cliff; then Artemis rushes off to hunt a dangerous monster. Back at Camp Half-Blood, the Oracle foretells that Artemis must be rescued and makes a prediction that bodes ill for one of their number—but which one? Percy, who is supposed to remain behind while others pursue the quest, follows in search of the missing Annabeth. Their adventures range widely across the U.S., taking them to locales that include Washington, D.C., and the deserts of the Southwest and pitting them against the usual assortment of colorful adversaries. The Percy Jackson & the Olympians series is built around a terrific idea—that the half-mortal offspring of Greek gods live among us, playing out struggles of mythic scale—and Riordan takes it from strength to strength with this exciting installment, adding even more depth to the characters and story arc while retaining its predecessors' nonstop laughs and action. Tixier Herald, Diana
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

New Grisham Book


I eagerly awaited the latest Grisham book and now it is here, and I have read it. Unfortunately, it is not my favorite John Grisham. I liked "Playing For Pizza" better I think.
For me the problem with this book is that he is busy making important political statements about our judicial system and not just spinning a good legal thriller. I imagine many people will enjoy this book, however I read for fun and it was just too real. "The Testament" still remains my all time favorite of his books. I refuse to read his nonfiction works (The Innocent Man and A Time to Kill) but have read and enjoyed all of his other books. If you like legal thrillers and don't mind real stuff you'll probably like this book. If you like to read mindlessly like me for pure pleasure, then maybe not.

Saturday, February 02, 2008

Political Thrillers

I used to like Tom Clancy but lost interest as his books "dried" up. Recently a colleague told me he liked Vince Flynn so on a lark I tried him. I'm hooked. Kind of like when I first read a Kathy Reichs. He does the thriller/suspense part quite well. For a political/spy type thriller, try him, you'll like him.
I've just read about Barry Eisler who apparently writes the same type and his protagonist is half American half Japanese. I'll let you know how that goes when I get one read.