Archive | May, 2009

“DIFFERENT ROADS”

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The two main characters, Jaycee and Bud, share similar emotional challenges, but were raised in very different environments. Both are extreme narcissists, egocentric, self-indulgent magpies with no likeable qualities. Both lost their mothers when they were very young, and both complain of fathers who do not love them.

Jaycee was born and raised in a small Alabama town. She grew up poor and quickly learned to fend for herself; her father was to busy with booze to take care of or even notice her.

Bud grew up in a very affluent environment in Florida. But Bud felt neglected; his brothers all took after their father, playing football, and running the family business. However, Bud was more interested in Baseball and college. These two unpleasant misfits meet in college and quickly realize they were made for each other. The story follows Jaycee and Bud as they make a life together and each learns to love and act selflessly.

The book is well written; however, there are several places (primarily at the beginning) where the author’s voice breaks into the narrative, to fill gaps. For example, in the first chapter, Jaycee’s character and brief history are delivered point by point in a couple of paragraphs. This reader would prefer to learn about the characters, from the characters, let the history unfold as needed.

Also, the book suffers from ‘bad blurbs’. When I first read the back cover, I was very turned off of the book; however, the story is edgy, fast-paced and colorful.

The ending is a bit of a let down, a little too fairly-tale perfect. The story overall has a hard-hitting edge and the smell of reality, but late in the story, Jaycee has several ‘near death experiences’ that push the story into the realm of fantasy. So if you are turned off by Christian mythos or spirituality then skip those parts, they don’t add to the story or characterizations anyway.

Overall, Different Roads is an entertaining book. I will recommend it and plan to look for more by Joyce Sterling Scarbrough.

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“Whiskey Sour: A Jack Daniels Mystery”

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Reviewer: linda

Caution: Puns Ahead!

That should be on the cover of this book–if you hate puns, you won’t find this book as amusing as I did. Because the bad guy calls himself the Gingerbread Man, one might think this was a light book. It certainly was a quick read, but the subject is disturbing, as the Gingerbread Man is a serial killer.

Like many mysteries, the suspense isn’t who the murderer is, but how he is caught. And, with a main character named Jack Daniels, you know this could become a very interesting series. I’m sold!

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“Shantaram: A Novel”

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(Anonymous Submission to old ClubReading website)

Lindsay or Linbaba, as the Indian people named him, is a fugitive who escaped prison in Australia, where he served two years of his 19-year sentence of arms robberies, which he used to do to support his heroin addiction caused by loosing custody of his daughter in a failed marriage. After the escape, Linbaba lands in Bombay on a fake New Zealand passport. Upon landing, he meets Prabaker who plays the guide role and shows him even the most secretive parts of Bombay. In the same time Lindsay meets Karla, a beautiful Swiss-American who works at Leopold’s cafÈ the place where all the ex-pats hang out. Linbaba falls deeply in love with Karla and the love takes a complicated role in the plot.

Following one night when Lindsay is robbed of all his possessions, Prabaker brings him to the slums of Bombay where over twenty-five thousand people lived in extreme poverty. There, Linbaba becomes the ‘doctor’, taking care of people illnesses: rat bites, dysentery, anemia, etc. His unfortunate fate brings him within the walls of Arthur Road Prison, a hellish place where he experiences the worst prison conditions. He is released from prison and Lindsay gets involved with the Bombay mafia, Abdel Khader Khan, which later on brings him in Afghanistan to fight against the Russians.

Roberts wrote the book in prison, two of the copies were destroyed in 13 years and then he succeeded to write the last copy for publishing. The writing approach is far from flawless, but the book has a magnetic appeal and it is hard to put down; its plot whirls into complicated events which are linked and explained in the end. The characters have fascinating personalities and have strong connections in the series of events.

It’s interesting how the book reveals the underground scene of the 80s and how its ex-pats engaged in criminal activity to lead a high life in Bombay. Despite the criminal activity he gets dragged into, Lindsay comes out as a strong person with a great heart. His love for Karla grows stronger in time even if she cannot return the same feelings. He is a savior, a fighter and a survivor.

I strongly recommend this book as a work of action thriller, travel guide, love story and superb epic.

Review by Manuela “Neo-Hippy Books Review”

http://neo-hippy.blogspot.com/

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“A Promise for Ellie (Daughters of Blessing)”

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Reviewer: spratt

Andrew Bjorklund and Ellie Wold have known they would wed since grade school. Two years before Ellie graduated, her family moved to a different community. Her father made the decision to further his furniture manufacturing business. It was only an hour away by train, but it may as well have been a thousand miles. Andrew and Ellie had to content themselves with staying in touch by letter. Finally, Ellie would graduate in May, and they planned to marry in June.

Andrew’s father asks them to wait for three or four months. He doesn’t have a reason other than he feels God is directing him to ask them to wait. Ellie is disappointed but has no real problem with it. She knows Andrew’s father is a wise man, and trusts his judgment. Andrew, though, is angry about it and doesn’t understand why Ellie is so willing to wait. He spends the summer being grumpy and angry about everything and with everyone.

Ellie moves back to her hometown to work for a friend in her general store during the summer. They do not see each other often because Andrew is working day and night with the farm and building their new house and barn.

We get the idea that Andrew and Ellie think they are the only ones to ever experience difficulties and conflicts. The author does an excellent job of weaving lessons learned into the conversation and private thoughts of the extended families–the parents and grandparents and older siblings. They do their best to guide the two young people–amazingly without pushing or lecturing. They have learned to trust God–and each other–and they realize the young people have to learn those lessons for themselves.

The story takes place in South Dakota at the turn of the century–1900. The author does a good job of showing what life was like there for the second generation Norwegian families.

The only negative is that I kept waiting for the plot of the story to be evident. About 10 pages from the end of the book I finally decided the author intended merely to open a window into the lives of two young people as they walk through the last few months before their wedding. I wish I had realized that sooner. I would have enjoyed the book more.

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“The $64 Tomato” William Alexander

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Bill and his wife are urbanites, or at least, suburbanites. They live in a small house in Yonkers, while Bill’s wife finishes medical school and residency. The author works with computers and admits he has no handyman skills, but he has learned some home fix-it skills out of necessity, fixing up their house, and making some improvements.

His wife will finish her residency soon, and they are looking to move. They both want to live somewhere more remote, they have two prerequisites: ‘a Main Street and a local newspaper.’ They eventually purchase the ‘Big Brown House’ in a small town. The house comes complete with unfinished floors, leaking roof, no kitchen and two rusting cars in the barn, and three acres of land. But, they both fall in love with it and decide to make it home. Soon Bill hears the call of fresh vegetables. Not ones to do anything small, they hire a designer to create their perfect kitchen garden.

The book is about Bill’s adventures in the garden, his battles with deer and a super-gopher, as well as pests, drought, grass and weeds. But this is much more then a gardening book, in fact, it is not a gardening book at all. The book shares Bill’s philosophies, his thoughts and desires, and where he believes he fits in the world. It is a funny and uplifting read.

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“Fresh from the Vegetarian Slow Cooker”

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Reviewer: linda

I have to admit, right at the beginning, that I love my slow cooker. In the winter, it is an odd week when at least one meal doesn’t come from it, and it’s often two meals. I hadn’t thought much about vegetarian recipes, but many of these look wonderful.

Not only are there main dishes, like Spicy Black Been Chili and Veggie Jambalaya, but there are appetizers, side dishes, and desserts. How about Cranberry-Walnut Stuffing or Layered Pesto Potatoes with Sun-Dried Tomatoes? Peach-Blueberry Tumble or Apples Stuffed with Cranberries and Almond Butter?

Many of the recipes call for tofu or other meat substitute. As a non-vegetarian, I’d likely add the real thing, but that’s the cook’s choice. I loved reading this book; it gave me ideas for my slow cooker I would have never thought of. But a warning, some of the recipes call for under 8 hours of cooking, which makes them impractical for a out of the house workday.

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“Shelf Life: Romance, Mystery, Drama”

[BookDetail][bookdetail]
Reviewer: linda
Do you buy your books on-line or strictly from independent booksellers? Shea obviously prefers the independent booksellers, as she has worked in one part-time for three years. This purports to be the story of her first year at the bookstore, but much of the book is taken up with Shea’s background as an author and a breast cancer survivor.
I had hoped for a bit more of the romance, mystery and drama in the subtitle than I found in the book. Nonetheless, this was a fun read, once I got past the background. More than anything else, it was a reference of books: books I’d never heard of, books I’d love to read, and even children’s books to be put on my list as possible gifts. I do enjoy books with these types of references, but I had hoped for something more from Shelf Life.
[bookdetail]: http://clubreadingbooks.com/bookdetail/1068/

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“Phoenix Tales: Stories of Death and Life”

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Reviewer: Bardsandsages

Breaking the boundaries between literary and genre fiction, Gregory Bernard Banks’ Phoenix Tales: Stories of Death and Life is a stunning collection of short stories that confronts the meaning of life and death with beautiful bravery. Part science fiction, part philosophy, with a little horror thrown in, this collection should be on everyone’s reading list.

Each tale is a wonder in and of itself, and combined into a collection, creates a dramatic and insightful tool with which to uncover our own thoughts and fears on the subject matter.

Banks opens the collection with “Escape Velocity”; a telling and frighteningly pertinent story of the price of heroic life saving efforts when the government, not the people themselves, decide if they should be allowed to die. With “Touched,”he delivers a futuristic Pinocchio tale involving a genetically enhanced boy who learns what it means to be human. While the stories have a strong science fiction bent, the reader always feels they are in a familiar place.

“An Elysian Dream” tells the story of a young woman who quickly discovers that paradise without freedom is nothing more than a prettier version of hell. A man learns it’s never too late to make amends with the past in “Home Going.” In the hands of another writer, these stories may have come out as either empty nihilist tales or shallow reaffirmations. But Banks has a knack of taking what might otherwise be considered morose story concepts and turning them into uplifting, insightful, and poignant life lessons.

With “Living with Mrs. Klase,” an abused woman and her children find Christmas with a retired farmer and his wife, who suffers from Alzheimer’s disease. “The Soul Man,” a story involving a person who seems to be the savior of abused children, is part flash fiction, part poetry, and part modern myth.

There are seventeen stories in this collection and every one of them elicited strong emotions in me as I read them. These are incredible stories that need to be read.

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“Child of the Prophecy: Book Three of the Sevenwaters Trilogy (The Sevenwaters Trilogy)” by Juliet Marillier

[BookDetail][bookdetail]

A myth combined with fantasy. That’s a very short description of what this book is.


The story and plot is important, but the writing and the journey is more important than finding out what happens. And that’s a really good thing, since I picked this book up not realizing that it was the third in a trilogy. I was a good 40 pages into the book before I entered it on this site and discovered it was the final book of a trilogy. It obviously stands on its own. Some of the characters of the first two books are in this book and I’m sure they would be more interesting if I had read the first two books.


At any rate, the book is set in Ireland and concerns a girl who is raised by her father, a sorcerer. She learns from him, and from her grandmother. She’s sent to her mother’s family with a task assigned to her by her grand mother. But will she manage to carry out that task? It is a wonderful tale, well written and worth the reading.


[bookdetail]: http://clubreadingbooks.com/bookdetail/1397/

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TextMate just gets better and better

TextMate just gets better and better

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I love [TextMate][Textmate]. I’m not usually a text editor fanboy, but [TextMate][Textmate] is just a delight to use.
Of course, for great writing tools, it’s hard to beat [Srivener][Scrivener]. [Scrivener][Scrivener] helps gather thoughts, makes it easy to move things around, and for the most part, is format agnostic.
For blog posting, the [TextMate][Textmate] blogging bundle makes it easy to use familiar tools for blog writing.
So, how to use them together…. Enter ‘Edit in TextMate.’ Under the Bundles menu, under TextMate, select the Install “Edit in TextMate” option. The bundle will create a menu option in application so edit text in TextMate, and save/pass the text back to the parent application. Now the best of both worlds, organize blog ideas in Scrivener, final edits in TextMate, including image uploads, then post to blog.
Enjoy!
[Textmate]: http://macromates.com/
[Scrivener]: http://www.literatureandlatte.com/scrivener.html

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