Feature and Follow Friday is a weekly meme hosted by Parajunkee's View and Alison can read as a great way to find new book blogs.
This week's question:
Q: Do you read one book at at time or do you switch back and forth between two or more?
As a book lover of many, many years, I must say that I deplore reading more than one book at time. Reading more than one story at a time muddles story lines for me. I like to enjoy and savor each book I read, and now that I have started reviewing books for my blog, I find that I need to concentrate on one book at a time to tease out the minute details. If I come across a book that I don't particularly enjoy, I power through the book or if the story is really unbearable, I abandon it all together. However, the scenario of abandonment is a rare one for me. I usually can finish every book I come across.
Check out what other bloggers said in response to this question
Friday, March 30, 2012
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Review - Amber Eyes
Name: Amber Eyes
Author: Jolyn Palliata
Published: January, 2012
Good Reads Synopsis
After an accident, one she shouldn't have walked away from, Lexi's life finally begins. She meets Dez, a new student with the most beautiful eyes she's ever seen. And since gazing into them, Lexi has had vivid waking dreams that pull her back through time, and into the warm embrace of a mysterious stranger - a stranger who becomes all too familiar. When offering an explanation for her detailed visions, Dez changes her world forever with two simple words: Soul Mates.
For the first time in her life, Lexi feels safe and complete. But lingering in the shadows is the embodiment of evil, coveting the light within her. He's a threat to Lexi's very existence, and to a love that has transcended time.
Tuesday, March 27, 2012
WWW Wednesday • 11
WWW Wednesday is hosted by MizB at Should Be Reading.
What are you currently reading?
I am reading Just Like That by Margo Candela and The Chosen Soul by Heather Killough-Walden.
What did you recently finish reading?
I just completed Afrika by Colleen Craig. A great story of the coming of age of a young Canadian girl investigating her Afrikaner heritage. My review of this book will be coming in the next few days. I also just completed Amber Eyes by Jolyn Palliata. This book was not my favorite read, but the storyline is intruiging enough that I am looking forward to the next book in the series.
What do you think you'll read next?
I have City of Thieves still available to me, and in my mailbox this week I received a number of great books that I am eagerly ready to dig into. Dangerous - a books I received for review is tugging at my heartstrings right now. But so are Accelerando and The Alchemyst - eLibrary book finds that I pick up recently.
I am always seeking my next best read, so please share what you're reading with me!
Teaser Tuesday • 2
Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by MizB of Should be reading. Anyone can join in the fun.
- 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 ther TBR lists if they like your teasers!
This week's selection is from Afrika by Colleen Craig.
"Knowing the truth matters," admitted Kim, as they walked into the heat of the garden. "But it's what we do with it that counts."
pg. 141
Sunday, March 25, 2012
In My Mailbox • 3
In My Mailbox is a weekly meme hosted by thestorysiren.com. eReaderMo version of this weekly feature will be posted almost every Sunday.
This week, I received a number of books from my local library and from authors on goodreads who want me to review their books. For a person who was concerned that she would go broke buying books to read, suddenly I am awash with great books that have come at no cost to me. For those of you who are used to having such an influx of books from so many different angles, do you remember what it was like for you the first time you received a book for review from an author, the first Advanced Reader Copy (ARC) from a publisher, or won your first book in a giveaway/competion? What did it feel like for you? I am giddy just thinking about it. Giddy because my little nook simple touch is just burning up with all the new books that I download to it. I can't help but grin every time I peruse the library on my nook. Especially when I think of the books I receive for review. The eLibrary ones go away fortunately and unfortunately.In any event, without further ado, here's my IMM for the week!
An eLibrary Book received this week.
This is a science fiction novel that peaked my interest. I love short story collections and this book is one based on the accelerating rate of human development. Sounds intriguing, exciting and breath-taking! Very much looking forward to reading this park.
Another eLibrary Book received this week. What first attracted me to this book was it's subtitle - The Secrets of The Immortal Nicholas Flamel. Do you recognize that name by any chance? Hint - think Harry Potter. :D
I am very much looking forward to reading this book!
A review book received this week from my loving group Read it and Reap on Goodreads.com
A review book received this week from Goodreads.com
That's my IMM for the week! I'm always looking for the next best read, so please share what you're reading with me!
Thursday, March 22, 2012
Feature and Follow • 1
Feature and Follow Friday is a weekly meme hosted by Parajunkee's View & Alison can read as a great way to find new book blogs.
This week's question:
Q: What is the longest book you've read? What are your favorite 600+ page reads.
I can honestly say I don't recall the longest book I've ever read. I tend not to pay attention to page numbers of books when I read them. That being said, I know of some "fatties" that I have enjoyed along the way in my reading endeavors. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, The Mists of Avalon, Dune to name a few.
Here are some other book blogs to check out on this lovely Feature & Follow Friday.
This week's question:
Q: What is the longest book you've read? What are your favorite 600+ page reads.
I can honestly say I don't recall the longest book I've ever read. I tend not to pay attention to page numbers of books when I read them. That being said, I know of some "fatties" that I have enjoyed along the way in my reading endeavors. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, The Mists of Avalon, Dune to name a few.
Here are some other book blogs to check out on this lovely Feature & Follow Friday.
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Which came first, the movie or the book?
This post is written in response to a blog prompt on the Story Siren.
Are you going to watch the hunger games this weekend?
I am not going to go see the Hunger games this weekend, next weekend, or anytime soon. Why? because I truly hate watching movies based on books that I have read. I have never enjoyed it, and despite the monumental success of the Harry Potter and Twilight series - I am yet to watch any of the twilight movies and I only watched the first Harry Potter movie in its entirety. And that was only because my children forced me to. I never watched the film - The Help, but I ravaged the book.
I am too finicky a reader to enjoy watching a what I consider to be a watered-down pictorial rendition of a great story in a book. It irks me when critical portions of a book that I love are warped, twisted or even worse CUT just to force a well-fleshed out story into the box of a movie screen. I find that I am more apt to watch a movie first without every having read the book and then discovering - hark! there is book behind the movie.
For those of you going to enjoy the Hunger Games this weekend, enjoy! I hope it serves the books well.
I'll be home, watching Rio for the 100th time with my 4-year old.
Are you going to watch the hunger games this weekend?
I am not going to go see the Hunger games this weekend, next weekend, or anytime soon. Why? because I truly hate watching movies based on books that I have read. I have never enjoyed it, and despite the monumental success of the Harry Potter and Twilight series - I am yet to watch any of the twilight movies and I only watched the first Harry Potter movie in its entirety. And that was only because my children forced me to. I never watched the film - The Help, but I ravaged the book.
I am too finicky a reader to enjoy watching a what I consider to be a watered-down pictorial rendition of a great story in a book. It irks me when critical portions of a book that I love are warped, twisted or even worse CUT just to force a well-fleshed out story into the box of a movie screen. I find that I am more apt to watch a movie first without every having read the book and then discovering - hark! there is book behind the movie.
For those of you going to enjoy the Hunger Games this weekend, enjoy! I hope it serves the books well.
I'll be home, watching Rio for the 100th time with my 4-year old.
Tuesday, March 20, 2012
WWW Wednesday • 10
What are you currently reading?
I am currently reading Amber Eyes by Jolyn Palliata. This is a book that landed in my mailbox via a contest from Goodreads.
What did you recently finish reading?
I just finished reading 145th Street by Walter Dean Myers. An eLibrary book from my local library. Check out my review.
What do you think you will read next?
Next on my list of books to read are some adult reads - Just like that by Margo Candela and City of Thieves by David Benioff. I also have Afrika by Colleen Craig, but I'm not sure if I can hold onto to it or extended my loan from the library.
I am always looking for the next best read, so please share what you're reading with me!
Teaser Tuesday • 1
Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by MizB of Should be reading. Anyone can join in the fun. How do you play?
"You don't know what you just wrote," he stated, rather than questioned. I shook my head. Can't one thing make sense with this guy?
He pointed at the broken lollipop. "That is sun," - he pointed at the weird bowl - "and that is mountain."
He must have one wild imagination. They look nothing like the sun or a mountain. I could draw better ones that that. Hell, a 3-year old could draw better ones than that! I looked at him doubtfully.
"Lexi, those are hieroglyphs."
I can't tell you how much tension is built up in this book!
- 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 ther TBR lists if they like your teasers!
"You don't know what you just wrote," he stated, rather than questioned. I shook my head. Can't one thing make sense with this guy?
He pointed at the broken lollipop. "That is sun," - he pointed at the weird bowl - "and that is mountain."
He must have one wild imagination. They look nothing like the sun or a mountain. I could draw better ones that that. Hell, a 3-year old could draw better ones than that! I looked at him doubtfully.
"Lexi, those are hieroglyphs."
I can't tell you how much tension is built up in this book!
Monday, March 19, 2012
Review - 145th Street
Name: 145th Street
Author: Walter Dean Myers
Publisher: Random House Publishers
Date of Publication: 2001
Synopsis: "A salty, wrenching honest collection of stories set on one block of 145th street. We get to know the oldest resident; the cop on the beat; fine Peaches and her girl Squeezie; Monkeyman; and Benny, a fighter on the way to a knockout. We meet Angela, who starts having prophetic dreams after her father is killed; Kitty, whose love for Mack pulls him back from the brink; and Big Joe, who wants a bang-up funeral while he's still around to enjoy it. Some of these stories are private, and some are the ones behind the headlines. In each one, characters jump off the page and pull readers right into the mix on 1-4-5." - Goodreads.com
My Thoughts
This story telling in this book combined light and gritty successfully. Like eating sweet and salty taffy, reading this book was very satisfying. Author Walter Dean Myers takes the reader into a world that is tough but sweet, where the grim violence of every-day survival is tempered with laugh-out loud moments that leave tears streaming down your face.
The writing style was simple and informal. I was introduced to every character like I was meeting them at a community breakfast. And I loved every character in the book - I loved the narrator's description of them. I loved meeting Kitty whom the narrator described as such:
"...What's more, everyone liked Kitty because she had one of those bubbling kind of personalities that soon as you met her, you know she was your flavor. Plus, the girl was fine. Not just kind of fine, not just take another look fine, but like, take the batteries out of the smoke alarms when she came by fine".
My favorite story in the book was "The Streak". This story had me laughing out loud from the beginning of the story to the end! "The Baddest Dog in Harlem" went from funny to heart-wrenchingly sad in the space of one paragraph - it touched me the most, I think, although there were so many other stories that I fell in love with as well.
Great book, great read, highly recommended!
Sunday, March 18, 2012
In My Mailbox (IMM • 2)
In My Mailbox is a weekly meme hosted by thestorysiren.com. eReaderMo version of this weekly feature will be posted almost every Sunday.
This week is purely YA book love. Amber Eyes and Cinder both came via groups from Goodreads and Afrika an e-library book.
Amber Eyes by Jolyn Palliata
*This book has sucked me in and I can't put it down. Much to the chagrin of everyone around me!
This book is the March Group read book for my goodreads group. Hopefully I can get to it by the end of the week!
My library eBook find. I have only 5 days left to read it, unless I can figure out how to renew it before. Darn Amber Eyes!
I'm always looking for the next best read, so please share what you're reading with me!
Friday, March 16, 2012
Keeping up with all the social connectivity!
Facebook, Twitter, Klout, Pininterest, Formspring....
Does anyone else find the exploding avenues of social connectivity dizzying? I've been following a number of well-connected book reviewers on twitter and their social connectivity profile is mind-boggling - well at least to me it is! They answer questions of formspring, express their interests on Pininterest, give and recieve Klout all the while managing active blogs and tweeting regularly. How in the bloody hell do they do it?
A few weeks ago, I posted about what being blogger meant to me and my aspirations for my blog (see this post). In hitting up other blogs and conversing with other reviewers out there, it's plain to see that maintaining an active social profile is an main ingredient for my recipe. But just how much to add is the question you see. One could spend forever enmeshed in the world of social networking, but how much time invested would make it truly worth your while? I wonder about that.
Until I figure it out, I'll just keep moving along with the sites I know best and trying to make time along the way for the rest. Happy social networking!
AAAAHHHH!
Does anyone else find the exploding avenues of social connectivity dizzying? I've been following a number of well-connected book reviewers on twitter and their social connectivity profile is mind-boggling - well at least to me it is! They answer questions of formspring, express their interests on Pininterest, give and recieve Klout all the while managing active blogs and tweeting regularly. How in the bloody hell do they do it?
A few weeks ago, I posted about what being blogger meant to me and my aspirations for my blog (see this post). In hitting up other blogs and conversing with other reviewers out there, it's plain to see that maintaining an active social profile is an main ingredient for my recipe. But just how much to add is the question you see. One could spend forever enmeshed in the world of social networking, but how much time invested would make it truly worth your while? I wonder about that.
Until I figure it out, I'll just keep moving along with the sites I know best and trying to make time along the way for the rest. Happy social networking!
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
WWW Wednesday • 9
WWW Wednesday is hosted by Miz B at Should Be Reading.
Reading has been pretty slow for me this week. I've spent a lot of my free leisure time at home on work - paying work stuff. It's awful I know, but a necessary evil sometimes.
My hope is to regain some of my work-life balance again in the next week or so, so I can get to the goodies I received in my mailbox this past week.
So on to my WWW Wednesday Post...
What are you currently reading?
I am currently reading 145th Street by Walter Dean Meyers. This is a YA collection of short stories set on 145th street in Harlem, New York. As I posted on goodreads yesterday, "I'm on page 80 of 160 of 145th Street: In a little over 7 short stories, I have sighed, cried, and laughed out loud. And I'm only half way done".
I am also reading The Chosen Soul by Heather Killough-Walden. I never like to read more than one book at once, but I accidentaly clicked on the first chapter in this book and I was instantly hooked. Now I am desperately racing through 145th street so I can devote my sole attention to this book.
What did you recently finish reading?
I finished reading A Little Less Girl by Tess Oliver. Another great eReader Bargain find! Check out my review.
What do you think you'll read next?
I have a number of books lined up. A couple of books I loaned from my local eLibrary just came in - City of Thieves by David Benioff and Afrika by Colleen Craig both look really good. I am also excited to read Just Like That by Margo Candela. So many books, so little time.
I'm always looking for the next best read, so please share what you're reading with me!
Sunday, March 11, 2012
In My Mailbox (IMM) • 1
In My Mailbox is a weekly meme hosted by thestorysiren.com. eReaderMo version of this weekly feature will be posted almost every Sunday.
This week I got three new books in my mailbox, two by sheer happenstance and one from my local library.
Just like that and The Brenda Diaries - by Margo Candela
These two books came in via a contest on goodreads.com. I have followed the Brenda Diaries tweet feed (@BrendaDiaries) ever since I joined twitter a few months ago and getting the eBooks set to me from the author was a total "squee" moment. The Brenda Diaries is a peek into the thoughts of a recovering temp with a bad attitude and a good work-ethic in the foothills of Beverly Hills. If the tweet feed is indicative of the book's content, this book is NOT for young readers eyes. This is definitely an adult read that should keep you snickering and even perhaps, outright laughing from beginning to end.
Author Margo Candela described my second IMM book as "romantic chick lit with a naughty twist". Suffice to say this may also be one that is not meant for young eyes, but I refrain from declaring it so till I read the book. I'm looking forward to reading both books by Ms. Candela. Here's hoping, I can feature them both soon on my weekly WWW Wednesday feature.
City of Thieves by David Benioff
And by process of elimination, I expect you've identified this book as my e-library book. City of Thieves was an online library find that appeared intriguing, amusing and definitely a great read to occupy myself with while I waited for other books like Dreams of Joy to pop into my cart.
I'm always looking for the next best read, so please share what you're reading with me!
Saturday, March 10, 2012
If I were the descendant of a greek god, I would be.....
This blog post is a prompt from a giveaway featured on thestorysiren.com for Oppression by Jessica Therrien.
Ever since I came across the greek gods in my Childcraft Encyclopedia, I've been secretly masquerading around as demi-god in disguise. In my mind, Hercules has absolutely nothing on me! And that boy Percy Jackson? Hah! What a waste of powers! I would shred him into a million pieces if he and his dull brain ever crossed me,
For I am the daughter of Athena the goddess of wisdom, courage, strategy and justice!
I loved Athena! still do! she is the strong and incredibly smart daughter of Zeus. And what a rush it would be to be her descendant. No task I couldn't tackle, no feat I wouldn't dare to try...
*sigh*
Ever since I came across the greek gods in my Childcraft Encyclopedia, I've been secretly masquerading around as demi-god in disguise. In my mind, Hercules has absolutely nothing on me! And that boy Percy Jackson? Hah! What a waste of powers! I would shred him into a million pieces if he and his dull brain ever crossed me,
For I am the daughter of Athena the goddess of wisdom, courage, strategy and justice!
I loved Athena! still do! she is the strong and incredibly smart daughter of Zeus. And what a rush it would be to be her descendant. No task I couldn't tackle, no feat I wouldn't dare to try...
*sigh*
Friday, March 9, 2012
What's my favorite middle school book?
This blog post is a prompt from a giveaway featured on thestorysiren.com for The Cavendish Home for Boys and Girls by Claire Legrand.
Having grown up outside of the US, I didn't read the typical books thrust on most middle schoolers in this country like - Catcher in the Rye, The Outsiders, you know... the tried and true books of teenage angst and desires. They are great books in their own right, and as an adult reading them for the first time a few years ago, I enjoyed every story and wished that I could have discovered them earlier. However my favorite book or rather books to read when I was of middle school age was - The Famous Five series by Enid Blyton.
The Famous Five was a book series written in the 1940s - 50s by English author Enid Blyton.
The Famous Five are a group of children who have the sort of adventures most kids dream about, in a world where ginger beer flows and ham rolls are a staple diet. Julian, Dick and Anne get together with their cousin George in the first adventure, Five On A Treasure Island. George is actually a girl who wants so desperately to be a boy she crops her hair and struts about doing boy things. She hates it when people call her by her correct name, Georgina. She has a dog called Timmy - oh yes, and an island. Most kid just have a dog, but George's parents own Kirrin Island and let her run around on it as if it were her play-thing. Her parents are known to Julian, Dick and Anne as Uncle Quentin and Aunt Fanny
- www.enidblyton.net
Now even though the books were written in the 40s and 50s, I didn't come across them till the 1980s when I was in middle school, (I knew what you were thinking!) The Famous Five were a cooler and less annoying version of the Scooby-Doo gang, chasing criminals instead of monsters and ghosts. They were timeless and I loved each and every character in the book. They offered escape from my latch-key existence, taking me beyond the walls of our small apartment and romping around on the ever exciting Kirrin Island. I fell in love with Julian who was the oldest and the most mature. George irritated me with her constant "tomboy-ness"and Dick and Anne were the perfect brother and sister I would have gladly traded my little sister for.
I read all 21 books in the series over and over again, swapping copies with my friends and sneaking the stories with my sister under the covers with a flashlight at night, up way past our bedtimes. When the Famous Five show came on the air, I was beyond excited and I diligently watched every episode I could.
Now with a middle-scholar of my own on the horizon, I plan to sneak in all my old favorites into her summer reading book bag. Based on the YouTube video, trying to watch the shows with her might not work out, but I hope I find her one day, laying in the sun, reading about the antics of my famous five on Kirrin Island.
Giveaway Alert!
Giselle at xpresso reads is celebrating the awesome milestone of having 2000 followers with not one, but three fantastic giveaways. Fans of giveaways, definitely check this out!
Wednesday, March 7, 2012
WWW Wednesday • 8
WWW Wednesday is hosted by Miz B at Should Be Reading. WWW Wednesdays is a fun way to share what you're reading. To play along, just answer the following 3 questions:
1. What are you currently reading?
2. What did you recently finish reading?
3. What do you think you'll read next?
What are you currently reading?
I am currently reading 145th Street by Walter Dean Meyers. This is a YA collection of short stories set on 145th street in Harlem, New York.
What did you recently finish reading?
I finished reading A Little Less Girl by Tess Oliver. Another great eReader Bargain find! Check out my review.
What do you think you'll read next?
The Chosen Soul by Heather Killough-Walden. This is an adult read that is cued up right after 145th Street. In previous weeks, I mentioned that I was going to read Dreams of Joy, however I decided to obtain it via my local library. So I'm on the waiting list and I hope it shows up soon!
I'm always looking for the next best read, so please share what you're reading with me!
YA Reading - A Little Less Girl
Goodread synopsis
Everything has always come easy to Jake West. But when Amy, the girl obsessed with him, commits suicide, the entire town of Raynesville is quick to blame Jake. Now Amy's cousin, Dani, has moved into town. And suddenly Jake has an obsession of his own. Dani Spencer has always dreamed of a home and normal life. When her beloved cousin and grandmother die, her wild, impetuous mother inherits their house in Raynesville. With Amy's diary in hand, Dani intends on finding out what happened to her cousin. And there's an obvious place to start... Jake West, the guy who broke Amy's heart.
My review (also available on goodreads)
A Little Less Girl by Tess Oliver
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Another quick and fun eBargain find.
Tess Oliver took us back to high school in this book. The beginning of a new school year, a town recovering from tragedy and now a new hot girl in town to rip open healing wounds. Tess Oliver's depiction of high school interaction read authentically. The cast of characters was small, but each played a pertinent part and played it well.
I fell in love with the two main characters - Dani and Jake. Dani's character was thoroughly likable - an intelligent girl, strong in mind and spirit, despite the hard knocks in life she suffered. Dani's move to Raynesville was the beginning of a new life for her - the end of a nomadic, chaotic expeirence with her mother, finding a place with her peers and developing a relationship with someone who cared about her just for her. I liked Dani because she served as a great role model for girls. Dani found a way to be caring and unbiased in her view of life. She was a thinker, with just enough spontaneity to be fun. Because of her mother's irresponsibility, Dani developed a maturity beyond her years and it was with this maturity that she set out to determine what truly happened to her cousin Amy. Jake, our male main was also great. A smart, handsome guy who was the town's golden child, yet not full of himself. Through the eyes of Amy and Dani, we find that Jake is also a caring character who took the time to spend notice the "invisibles" in his world. After the death of Amy, Jake found himself squirming under the heavy gaze of the town - the same gaze that had followed him adoringly all his life, was suddenly scrutinizing and judging. Jake was almost too good to be true, but not in a sickly sweet way.
I liked that Dani acknowledged very quickly in the story that she liked Jake and believed him innocent of Amy's death. Granted Amy helped Dani come to this realization, Dani was already walking the path of the thought from the moment she met Jake. I wish the dynamics between some of the characters was fleshed out a little more. For instance, the friction between Jake and his father seemed out of place and undeserved. Jake was as fresh as most teenagers often are, but he was also respectful of his parents. That example and some others felt contrived in the story.
The story telling was fast. It seemed that Dani found the answer she was looking for in like 4 weeks. I couldn't really get a sense of time passage, which left me a little disoriented, but did not the story negatively. For a cheap find ($0.99), this was a quick, simple and fun read. Brava Tess Oliver. Looking forward to reading more of your work.
View all my reviews
Everything has always come easy to Jake West. But when Amy, the girl obsessed with him, commits suicide, the entire town of Raynesville is quick to blame Jake. Now Amy's cousin, Dani, has moved into town. And suddenly Jake has an obsession of his own. Dani Spencer has always dreamed of a home and normal life. When her beloved cousin and grandmother die, her wild, impetuous mother inherits their house in Raynesville. With Amy's diary in hand, Dani intends on finding out what happened to her cousin. And there's an obvious place to start... Jake West, the guy who broke Amy's heart.
My review (also available on goodreads)
A Little Less Girl by Tess Oliver
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Another quick and fun eBargain find.
Tess Oliver took us back to high school in this book. The beginning of a new school year, a town recovering from tragedy and now a new hot girl in town to rip open healing wounds. Tess Oliver's depiction of high school interaction read authentically. The cast of characters was small, but each played a pertinent part and played it well.
I fell in love with the two main characters - Dani and Jake. Dani's character was thoroughly likable - an intelligent girl, strong in mind and spirit, despite the hard knocks in life she suffered. Dani's move to Raynesville was the beginning of a new life for her - the end of a nomadic, chaotic expeirence with her mother, finding a place with her peers and developing a relationship with someone who cared about her just for her. I liked Dani because she served as a great role model for girls. Dani found a way to be caring and unbiased in her view of life. She was a thinker, with just enough spontaneity to be fun. Because of her mother's irresponsibility, Dani developed a maturity beyond her years and it was with this maturity that she set out to determine what truly happened to her cousin Amy. Jake, our male main was also great. A smart, handsome guy who was the town's golden child, yet not full of himself. Through the eyes of Amy and Dani, we find that Jake is also a caring character who took the time to spend notice the "invisibles" in his world. After the death of Amy, Jake found himself squirming under the heavy gaze of the town - the same gaze that had followed him adoringly all his life, was suddenly scrutinizing and judging. Jake was almost too good to be true, but not in a sickly sweet way.
I liked that Dani acknowledged very quickly in the story that she liked Jake and believed him innocent of Amy's death. Granted Amy helped Dani come to this realization, Dani was already walking the path of the thought from the moment she met Jake. I wish the dynamics between some of the characters was fleshed out a little more. For instance, the friction between Jake and his father seemed out of place and undeserved. Jake was as fresh as most teenagers often are, but he was also respectful of his parents. That example and some others felt contrived in the story.
The story telling was fast. It seemed that Dani found the answer she was looking for in like 4 weeks. I couldn't really get a sense of time passage, which left me a little disoriented, but did not the story negatively. For a cheap find ($0.99), this was a quick, simple and fun read. Brava Tess Oliver. Looking forward to reading more of your work.
View all my reviews
Thursday, March 1, 2012
Adult Read Review - The Mill River Recluse
The Mill River Recluse by Darcie Chan
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
The Mill River Recluse
The Mill River Recluse is the story of Mary McAllister, a quiet unassuming woman who struggled for most of her life to rise about the traumas of her life. Darcie Chan introduces us to Mary the night before she dies and then bounces back and forth between Mary at 16 and the events that occur after she dies, coloring in the details of Mary's life along the way in a story that spans time for the late 1930s to present day. There are a host of characters that fill out the story, from the wealthy McAllisters whom Mary joins by marriage to the present day inhabitants of Mill River who live in the sleepy town down hill from Mary's majestic home. Darcie tells us just enough of each character to serve as filler for her story, but not enough for me to form an enduring connection with them. The one exception was Father Michael O'Brien, Mary's friend and sole confidant for years. He is one of my favorite characters in the book. He was a priest wracked with the guilt of his own ongoing sin, but yet devoted his life to the service of one fragile soul and I fell in love with this character from the moment he first slipped. Other than him and perhaps as intended, Mary is my main connection to the story, and while she lived up to the challenge, I feel the other characters might have been a little gipped.
The overall theme of this story is redemption. Other reviews I have come across stated that the finale was overly positive and too saccharin sweet, however I felt inspired by Mary's battle and that of the other characters in the book. It was refreshing to read a story with a happy ending, especially when there had been so much pain. If you're seeking a simple read with a message of enduring and preservation, then consider this book.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
The Mill River Recluse
The Mill River Recluse is the story of Mary McAllister, a quiet unassuming woman who struggled for most of her life to rise about the traumas of her life. Darcie Chan introduces us to Mary the night before she dies and then bounces back and forth between Mary at 16 and the events that occur after she dies, coloring in the details of Mary's life along the way in a story that spans time for the late 1930s to present day. There are a host of characters that fill out the story, from the wealthy McAllisters whom Mary joins by marriage to the present day inhabitants of Mill River who live in the sleepy town down hill from Mary's majestic home. Darcie tells us just enough of each character to serve as filler for her story, but not enough for me to form an enduring connection with them. The one exception was Father Michael O'Brien, Mary's friend and sole confidant for years. He is one of my favorite characters in the book. He was a priest wracked with the guilt of his own ongoing sin, but yet devoted his life to the service of one fragile soul and I fell in love with this character from the moment he first slipped. Other than him and perhaps as intended, Mary is my main connection to the story, and while she lived up to the challenge, I feel the other characters might have been a little gipped.
The overall theme of this story is redemption. Other reviews I have come across stated that the finale was overly positive and too saccharin sweet, however I felt inspired by Mary's battle and that of the other characters in the book. It was refreshing to read a story with a happy ending, especially when there had been so much pain. If you're seeking a simple read with a message of enduring and preservation, then consider this book.
View all my reviews
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)