Sunday, September 8, 2013

It's Monday, What Are You Reading?


It's Monday, What Are You Reading is a weekly meme hosted by Sheila at Book Journey where we share what we have read and what we are reading and see what everyone else is reading.

Last Monday, my husband and I had a great day at a winery to close out the summer, as I started back to work on Tuesday. I have been busy getting the library ready for students and working on the new books. I am pretty excited for the students to see what we have for them this year!


Read Last Week:



A Moveable Feast by Ernest Hemingway: I finished this sucker. I found it hard to read at times, I felt a little like I was reading the same thing over and over. Is that terrible, to talk of Papa this way? 

Joyland by Stephen King: I loved this. Classic King. 


Reading This Week:


  


Fever by Mary Beth Keane: I read about this on The Relentless Reader a while ago, and then forgot about it. At the library the other day, I saw it and remembered that it sounded good, so I picked it up. So far, it is really interesting!

I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith: Another book I read about it and decided to read.

The Shadowy Horses by Susanna Kearsley: I read this about 10 years ago or so, and I keep seeing it pop up again. I thought it time to revisit it.



How about you? Have you read any of these? Also, do you have any scary/gothic/halloween or fall books that you love and can recommend?






Saturday, September 7, 2013

A Few Quickies of Books I was Ho-Hum About

Omens by Kelley Armstrong

I love this author's previous works; this book was a slight departure from her norm and I think it was well done. I don't feel like I am quite "hooked" yet, I feel it was really a big setup for the rest of the series. I still enjoyed the premise and I am curious as to what will happen next, and where this story is going. It has definite promise, but I don't have a solid opinion on it yet.









The Night is Forever by Heather Graham

Another entertaining installment in the Krewe of Hunters series. This supernatural mystery takes place at a horse ranch in Tennessee. The ranch is used for anyone with troubles to visit and receive therapy, with psychiatrists and animal therapy. The best part is that the animals themselves are rescued - the various horses, dogs and cats have all come from desperate situations as well, and now are safe. This totally appealed to my animal rescue nature. The plot itself was ok - this one didn't interest me as much as others. Something about it just didn't work as well, although I still found it enjoyable.






Vampires in the Lemon Grove by Karen Russell

This book of short stories was highly imaginative - sometimes I even wondered what the author was tripping on while she was writing it. Horses that are reincarnations of former presidents, for instance? The title story was a sad commentary on love and mortality and obsession, a sad old vampire that is the furthest thing from the sparkly young vampires of today. I enjoyed that story, although it was depressing, and also a story about young girls enslaved in a silk factory, who slowly transform into silkworms themselves. It was truly horrific, like a blend of Kafka and Lovecraft, and freaked me out. Some of the stories were hit and miss for me, but there were a few I enjoyed, and the silkworm story was definitely my favorite.



















Sunday, September 1, 2013

It's Monday, What Are You Reading


It's Monday, What Are You Reading is a weekly meme hosted by Sheila at Book Journey where we share what we have read and what we are reading and see what everyone else is reading.

Read Last Week:


A Moveable Feast by Ernest Hemingway: I am still actually reading this one, but I am almost done. I wish I had lived in Paris with all these writers and artists!

Let's Explore Diabetes with Owls by David Sedaris: Another American living in France. I laughed until I cried, so funny.


Reading This Week:


  

Joyland by Stephen King: The perfect starter to the autumn season. 

I am also finishing up A Moveable Feast.

Reviews Posted:


One lonely only. Slowly but surely I will catch up with my reviews.


I also signed up for this years R.I.P. VIII challenge

Saturday, August 31, 2013

R.I.P. VIII


It's getting to be my favorite time of the year!! I love autumn, with its crisp brisk air, bonfires, leaves crunching underfoot, and my favorite holiday of them all, Halloween. I love a good scary story, in book or movie form.  F.Scott Fitzgerald said that life starts all over again when it gets crisp in the fall, and I am in agreement.

This year I am going to try (again) to participate in R.I.P. VIII, a scary reading challenge hosted by Stainless Steel Droppings. I say again because last year I got sick in the beginning of October, and stayed sick. It is kind of a tradition for me to get sick in October, a tradition that started when I was five. I am hoping to avoid it this year with lots of vitamins, soup, and a flu shot.


I am attempting Peril The First - I am to read four books that fit the definition of R.I.P. Literature. And since I try to fill October with all things scary, this should not be a problem, especially if I stay healthy. I am definitely going to read The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, as for the others I am tossing around a few ideas. I am sure there will be a book that is a ghost story, and one that is about witches..and then maybe one pure horror.


I am also participating in the Peril on the Screen challenge. October wouldn't be complete without horror movies. I think it is time to re invoke our "Horrible Horror Movie Night" this year!

What about you? Do you say yay or nay to Halloween? 


Tuesday, August 27, 2013

The Wishing Thread - Review

Title: The Wishing Thread
Author: Lisa Van Allen
Source: Librarything Early Reviewers

The Van Ripper women have been the talk of Tarrytown, New York, for centuries. Some say they’re angels; some say they’re crooks. In their tumbledown “Stitchery,” not far from the stomping grounds of the legendary Headless Horseman, the Van Ripper sisters—Aubrey, Bitty, and Meggie—are said to knit people’s most ardent wishes into beautiful scarves and mittens, granting them health, success, or even a blossoming romance. But for the magic to work, sacrifices must be made—and no one knows that better than the Van Rippers.

When the Stitchery matriarch, Mariah, dies, she leaves the yarn shop to her three nieces. Aubrey, shy and reliable, has dedicated her life to weaving spells for the community, though her sisters have long stayed away. Bitty, pragmatic and persistent, has always been skeptical of magic and wants her children to have a normal, nonmagical life. Meggie, restless and free-spirited, follows her own set of rules. Now, after Mariah’s death forces a reunion, the sisters must reassess the state of their lives even as they decide the fate of the Stitchery. But their relationships with one another—and their beliefs in magic—are put to the test. Will the threads hold?

My thoughts:

Have you ever read a book you just wanted to crawl into the pages and the story, and live there? That is how I felt about The Wishing Thread. If I could magically transport my life into this book, I would.

It's a family tradition for my brother and I to love the story of the Headless Horseman and Sleepy Hollow. We know the Disney cartoon by heart, the songs, the dialogue, even the lines from the cartoon shorts that come before it on the DVD. I loved the Johnny Depp movie version, and I am excited for the upcoming television show, although it involves time travel and that usually turns me off.  I sadly have never read the Washington Irving story, but I plan on correcting that in October.



I looked at the blurb for the book, and was a little apprehensive. I have had bad experiences with books that take place or are based on an original story, like this one. Or Scarlett, that sad sequel to Gone with the Wind.  So I started reading a little reservedly. It didn't take long for the story and the characters to steal me away into their lives.

Aubrey and her two sisters grew up with their aunt in a house that had been in the family for generations. Their house is known as The Stichery around town, and always had been. The Van Rippen family's heritage is long and winding and magical. They can knit spells, fulfilling the wishes of those who come to them, desperate, hopeful, resigned. The wisher must give up something of great importance to them in order for the deal to be made, and for the spell to work. But this is not a guarantee that the magic will work, just a sign of good faith between the two.

The idea of being able to embed emotions such as dreams and wishes, and curses like anger and despair into creative works is also called sympathetic magic. I have read this as a device in another book, where it was said that women who made quilts while waiting for their loved ones to come back from war sewed those emotions right into the quilts. I find this idea fascinating - I am pretty fanciful, and halfway believe that the transference really could happen.

The sisters grow up, and one by one leave The Stitchery - except Aubrey. She is different. She is the chosen one to stay on and grant the wishes, the sign of the choosing being her bright electric blue eyes. This part confused me, I wasn't sure if it was her whole entire eye that was blue, including the whites, or just the iris. Their beloved aunt dies, and her sisters come home for a visit. At this point, their lives start unraveling, and outside forces are working against them and The Stitchery. It is up to them to come together to change their own fates.

When I finished reading the story, I read the author interview and book club questions in the back. One of the book club questions was what would you would wish for, and what would you give up in the hopes of your wish coming true? You don't have to say, because I am sure your wishes are personal, but I think it is a thought provoking question.

This book is wonderful - magical, hopeful, yet with the real struggles that people actually go through in life, with a touch of Headless Horseman. The book was set during the fall, and it made me wish for autumn, with its crisp breezes, crunchy leaves, and sweaters and jeans, and is my favorite time of the year. And I don't knit, but I think I am going to give it a try this winter!

Sunday, August 25, 2013

It's Monday, What Are You Reading?


It's Monday, What Are You Reading is a weekly meme hosted by Sheila at Book Journey where we share what we have read and what we are reading and see what everyone else is reading.

Read Last Week:

    

Just a weird aside: I find when I pick up two very different books, there will be one thing the same in them both, that is very coincidental. This time, it was the name Mariah. Mariah was a character in The Wishing Thread, and there was a Mariah in The Night is Forever. This happens to me a lot, and I always think it is strange.  

The Wishing Thread by Lisa Van Allen: This was a win from Librarything, and I absolutely loved it! Review to come this week.

The Night is Forever by Heather Graham: I have an addiction to this series.  Review this week.

Omens by Kelley Armstrong: I picked this up because I have enjoyed books by Armstrong in the past; this was very different but just as good. Review this week.

Reading this week:

  

It's my week of brownish covers! Lol. (Another coincidence!)

Let's Explore Diabetes with Owls by David Sedaris: This is our book club book, and I have to get on it, since book club is Wednesday! I am sure I will be done by then though.

A Moveable Feast by Ernest Hemingway: I am reading this as part of The Classic Club's newest Classic Spin event. I am excited, it was one of the books I had hoped to read. 

Reviews Posted Last Week:





Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Sailor Twain - Review

Title: Sailor Twain
Author: Mark Siegel
Source: Library

One hundred years ago. On the foggy Hudson River, a riverboat captain rescues an injured mermaid from the waters of the busiest port in the United States. A wildly popular—and notoriously reclusive—author makes a public debut. A French nobleman seeks a remedy for a curse. As three lives twine together and race to an unexpected collision, the mystery of the Mermaid of the Hudson deepens.

A mysterious and beguiling love story with elements of Poe, Twain, Hemingway, and Greek mythology, drawn in moody black-and-white charcoal, Sailor Twain is a study in romance, atmosphere, and suspense.



My thoughts:

I was walking through the library one day, and this book was propped up on the shelf in the graphic novels section, its gorgeous cover in shades of blue and green and mystery beckoning to me. I  had to check it out and read it immediately. Maybe this book has a siren's song of its own?

Gritty, a little bit gloomy, it reminded me of the depths of the sea, if there was a word to describe how that ocean bottom would feel. Deep and dark, murky and mysterious. Where mermaids dwell. We all know mermaids are said to be heartless and soulless and dangerous, seducing people to their deaths. But if they were real, wouldn't we want to meet one? Like fairies and unicorns, they are magical and curious and otherworldly. The illustrations themselves are beautiful, and reminiscent of the industrial era that this story is set in, all smoky and black and dusty.



Riverboat Captain Elijah Twain is an upright, moral, stand up man. No nonsense and serious, he is the last person you would imagine to fall in thrall to a creature such as a mermaid. He is happily married to his lady love, who is bound to a wheelchair, and to land. He is even drawn angular and sharp, no soft edges to him, that would invite such fancifulness, although I feel riverboat captains are by nature romantic figures.  In contrast, French nobleman Lafayette falls in love with almost every woman he meets, speaks of the river and the world around him as a poet would, and seems the least responsible human being on earth. The very opposite of Twain. Of the two, Lafayette is a romantic dreamer, while Twain is a pragmatic realist. They go about their lives upon the river, one engaged in many trysts, one bent on business. Until one night this happens:

What is the deal? Who is this mermaid? Where did she come from? What happens next? You will have to read it to find out! 

One note: This book really isn't for kids. There is the obvious nudity of the mermaid, and other more sexy times illustrations. I was surprised at first, because my library had a sticker over the John Irving blurb that states the book contains erotically charged drawings.  So, just in case you didn't see that, there are a few sexual drawings. 

I have fallen in love with this genre of books that all began with the book Blankets. Sailor Twain was completely different, but just as entertaining and thought provoking. It is a story that draws you in and holds you under until you reach the end.