Friday, January 16, 2009
Friday Finds 1-16-09
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Life 1-14-09
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros (Book Review)
Author: Sandra Cisneros
Genre: Fiction/Short stories
I didn't know whether or not to include the first sentence here, as it is a short book with short stories - but it seemed appropriate given the title of the book. So here it is: We didn't always live on Mango Street.
I am not a short story lover, and probably would not have read this book other than I needed a quick read for the New Classics Challenge which ends in a few weeks. I am not even sure that these would classify as short stories. They brought to mind journal entries that a young girl/teenager may make. Does anyone remember back to a time in school where you had to keep a journal that you wrote in daily as an assignment, but the subject matter was your choice? Then think of having it published - and you would have a book of this type. There is a progression through the book though, and you begin to see how the author is maturing -- even as the stories begin to get slightly longer and subject matter of some of them more serious. The book also showed me a different perspective than the one that I had growing up in predominately white, small-town Iowa.
Esperanza (narrator of stories) lives in a small red house on Mango Street with one bedroom and one bathroom for her Mama, Papa and 3 brothers/sisters. Even so, you see that it is an improvement over their previous homes, as this is not an apartment and they do not have a landlord. This home is theirs. I am just going to share with you a couple of stories that stuck with me.
The Family of Little Feet - A family gave Esperanza and her sisters/friends a bag of shoes. These were lemon shoes, red shoes, and dancing shoes that were pale blue but used to be white. The little girls pranced all over the neighborhood taking turns with the different shoes until an old bum tells them they are pretty. He asks one of them, named Rachel, if she will kiss him for a dollar. Esperanza grabs her hand and they run all the way home. They hide the shoes and don't play with them again.
Louie, His Cousin and His Other Cousin - Basically about a boy who shows up with a Cadillac. He gives all the neighborhood kids rides in it. The police show up and he makes them all get out and then tries to get away. But the police catch him and arrest him. They all wave to him as he is being driven away.
And now, here is what it says in the book: Ostensibly, The House on Mango Street provides a framework for the first tentative writings of a young girl finding herself by recording her own feelings about the world around her. But in a deeper sense, the book chronicles in a highly poetic style, the psychological and social development of a writer who struggles to derive emotional and creative sustenance where material and educational resources are absent. Her sensitive portrayal enchants us and reaffirms our belief that art and talent can survive, even under the most adverse conditions.
Like I said in the beginning, I am not a lover of short stories. I am sure there is much that can be gleaned from these, but I was not reading them critically, to obtain any higher meaning. They tended to be depressing, showing the not so savory side of (assuming) Chicago. The last few stories showed a desire on the part of the narrator to want to get out of Mango Street, but she always knew that no matter where she went, she would come back for those who were not as lucky as she, and were not able to get out.
Where are you? 1-13-2009
The car that I am a passenger in has just crashed through a guardrail into a lake. The car is filling up with water quickly, I cannot even remember who I was with and I can't figure out why I cannot get free. (Black Water by Joyce Carol Oates)
Where are you?
Teaser Tuesday 1-13-2009
Monday, January 12, 2009
Mailbox Monday - 1-12-2009
While transplanting the rosebush her church's handsome greeter, Ethan Banning, inadvertently killed, Summer and Ethan discover a hidden stash of diamonds, a rusty can full of cash, and a bloody gardening glove. This discovery sets Summer and her candy-making aunt on a search for a killer.
Scream For Me by Karen Rose
Adele Matin couldn't wait to put her lonely childhood and hometown behind her. Amid the bright lights and hustle and bustle of New York, she built a life for herself -- until one terrible mistake brought it crashing down. Now Adele is running again, this time to a cottage she inherited from her mother in rural Pennsylvania. And she's about to realize that a small town has more to offer than she ever dreamed.
An artist and woodworker, Jay Westvelt knows a thing or two about living in the country. Adele is intrigued by her mysterious and sexy green-eyed neighbor, a man who took care of her house and soon cares deeply for her. But even as Adele's heart begins to soften toward him, secrets from her mother's past threaten to send her fleeing back to the city. Can Jay convince her to stay with him?
For the Love of Pete by Julia Harper
Free spirited Zoey Addler is about to hijack a federal agent. And not just any federal agent, but very Special Agent Dante Torelli, a man whose designer suits and Italian shoes are more GQ than FBI. But when her baby niece, Pete, is snatched right in front of her eyes, Zoey doesn't hesitate to scramble into Dante's spotless BMW. She needs his help to rescue the baby . . . if only she can ignore his Lips of Sin.
Dante's original mission is down the drain and he's dodging bullets with a loopy redhead by his side. He likes quiet. She never shuts up. He likes to follow the rules. She throws the rules out the window. But these opposites do more than attract -- they ignite. With a henpecked hit man running wild, cooking-obsessed matrons chasing down contraband spices, and a relentless killer tracking them all, Dante and Zoey will risk everything for themselves and . . . for the love of Pete!
Saturday, January 10, 2009
From the Stacks - Challenge Completed!
Assaulted by Joy - Stephen Simpson
In the Shadow of Lions - Ginger Garrett
Drinkwater - Eric Hopkins
The Road - Cormac McCarthy
Walking with Wolf - Kay Chornook & Wolf Guindon
It feels good to have completed a challenge! Out of the 5 books The Road was probably my favorite, followed closely by Assaulted by Joy. My least favorite was Drinkwater.
Friday, January 9, 2009
The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold (Book Review)
Title: The Lovely Bones
Author: Alice Sebold
Genre: fiction
First sentence: My name is Salmon, like the fish; first name, Susie. I was fourteen when I was murdered on December 6, 1973.
This was the most original book that I have read in quite awhile. The narrator of the story, Susie, is the murder victim. We see her family, her friends, and even her murderer, Mr. Harvey, in the days and years after her death through her eyes.
She leads us down that road as her friends and her 'crush' Ray try to understand and come to terms with her murder. As her family disintegrates, she begins to see them as individuals - even as those around them on Earth only see them as shadows of Susie.
Her father is convinced he knows who committed the crime and one night he follows a light into a neighbor's cornfield, only to be clobbered with his own baseball bat by some innocent high school kids. This is the last straw for Susie's mother. Her mother's loneliness is only amplified with Susie's death and she seeks comfort away from her husband. This eventually leads her to the other side of the country where she tries to forget.
Grandma Lynn moves in with her dad, brother Buckley and sister Lyndsey to try to help them cope with Susie's loss and their abandonment by their mother. The police have pretty much told the family that they have no leads and they are closing the investigation so Lyndsey decides to go looking for evidence herself. She watches Mr. Harvey's house, and one afternoon when he leaves, she breaks in and actually finds some evidence. She barely gets out of the house in time, but Mr. Harvey has seen her so knows that he needs to leave.
Come and read this book and follow her family as they move from her murder and their isolation as they come together year's later and are finally able to say out loud 'Susie is not coming home again.'
This novel was wonderfully written and gives us a picture of one little girl's heaven, which, while not always joyous, is stable and safe. Susie's heaven allows her to mature and move on in much the same way that her family does.
Thursday, January 8, 2009
The Road by Cormac McCarthy (Book Review)
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
Butterfly Award!
I get to pass The Butterfly Award on now to some wonderful blogs. The rules are quite simple:
- Put the logo on your blog.
- Add a link to the person who awarded you.
- Award up to ten other blogs.
- Add links to those blogs on yours.
- Leave a message for your awardees on their blogs.
Everyone should go check out these other cool blogs as well as Kim's at Cloud 9!
Zoealea at Zoe's Book Reviews
Cheryl at Adventures of a Somewhat Crunchy Mama
Mary at Books, Gardens and Dogs
Audra at Seriously?
Becky at Becky's Book Reviews
Anysia at Booklorn
Wendy at Caribousmom
Walking with Wolf by Kay Chornook & Wolf Guindon (Book Review)
Author: Kay Chornook & Wolf Guindon (can contact the author at kchornook(at)rogers(dot)com)
Publisher: Wandering Words Press (2008)
Genre: Biography/Memoir
First Sentence: "I'm out here looking over the treetops, across the old clearings to the ridge and the Continental Divide, thinking about those early years."
At first, this book was hard to follow – it has so many people and places, many with unfamiliar names to me, that I was not sure how I was going to keep up. The style was also a little hard to follow –but I kept with it, and am glad that I did.
The narration of the book jumps back and forth between Kay and Wolf – and this was confusing in the beginning. As I read, I learned to watch for the “quotes” – as Wolf’s stories were “quoted” and Kay’s were not. I would also recommend that you allot enough time to read complete chapters at a sitting, as they are each like short stories.
Like chapter 4, Stepping Stones, which tells how the Quakers from America were accepted by the people of Costa Rica and how together the started building their community and businesses. From page 49:
“Monteverde felt like it was to be our home right from the beginning and it has continued to feel that way. The economics of it were and still are bouncing on the borderline. There have been opportunities to go into something better economically, but we’ve made our choices and feel very satisfied with them. I remember thinking, ‘Well, if the dairy plant fails and if Monteverde fails,’ and under the circumstances they very well could have, I felt I’d enjoyed the experience and could always start over and survive. Besides, at the time to me it wasn’t work, it was just part of the project of the community we were living in.”
I also liked chapter 6, The Path to Extinction, which tells the story of the golden toads and the part they played in helping bring awareness to the Monteverde Cloud Forest Reserve.
I cannot do justice in trying to give a complete overview of this book, as it encompasses so much time and important material, so I am going to cheat and include the words from the inside cover:
From the lush, windy cloud forest of Monteverde in Central America comes the story of pioneering conservationist Wolf Guindon. Jailed in the United States in 1949 as a conscientious objector, Wolf and his bride Lucky were among a small group of Quakers who left Alabama a year later in search of a new life and found it on a wet mountaintop in Costa Rica. For the next twenty years, Wolf labored to transform the land to make it habitable and productive, even as he was falling in love with the flourishing jungle around him. In 1972, he found a new purpose when he helped establish the Monteverde Cloud Forest Reserve. Since then he has worked relentlessly to secure the protection of the surrounding wilderness so that the flora and fauna of this vast, incredibly beautiful and biologically diverse region will be intact for generations to come.
In 1990, following her first experience of walking with Wolf for several days through the rainforest, Canadian social activist Kay Chornook gave Wolf a tape recorder. She encouraged him to record his many remarkable tales of cutting trails through the dense vegetation, following tapir tracks across the ridges, discovering the wonders of the wild abundance, and sharing innumerable cups of coffee with homesteaders, biologists and fellow adventurers. Walking with Wolf is a personal memoir, but it is also the history of a place and a movement as well as a celebration of lives lived amongst the trees of both Canada and Costa Rica.
Tuesday, January 6, 2009
My First Official Book Giveaway!
Monday, January 5, 2009
Mailbox Monday - 1-5-2009
The Valentine Edition by Robin Shope - I received this as an E-book from First Wild Card Tours. I reviewed Robin's book The Christmas Edition and loved it!
Be Strong & Curvaceous
It is time to play a Wild Card! Every now and then, a book that I have chosen to read is going to pop up as a FIRST Wild Card Tour. Get dealt into the game! (Just click the button!) Wild Card Tours feature an author and his/her book's FIRST chapter!
You never know when I might play a wild card on you!
Personal note: Great book! For my review - please go here.
and the book:
Be Strong and Curvaceous (All About Us Series, Book 3)
FaithWords (January 2, 2009)
Plus a Tiffany's Bracelet Giveaway! Go to Camy Tang's Blog and leave a comment on her FIRST Wild Card Tour for Be Strong and Curvaceous, and you will be placed into a drawing for a bracelet that looks similar to the picture below.
Shelley Adina is a world traveler and pop culture junkie with an incurable addiction to designer handbags. She knows the value of a relationship with a gracious God and loving Christian friends, and she's inviting today's teenage girls to join her in these refreshingly honest books about real life as a Christian teen--with a little extra glitz thrown in for fun! In between books, Adina loves traveling, listening to and making music, and watching all kinds of movies.
It's All About Us is Book One in the All About Us Series. Book Two, The Fruit of my Lipstick came out in August 2008. Book Three, Be Strong & Curvaceous, came out January 2, 2009. And Book Four, Who Made You a Princess?, comes out May 13, 2009.
Visit the author's website.
Product Details:
List Price: $ 9.99
Reading level: Young Adult
Paperback: 256 pages
Publisher: FaithWords (January 2, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0446177997
ISBN-13: 978-0446177993
AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:
I used to think that was the dumbest saying ever. I mean, when you wish for something, by definition it’s wonderful, right? Like a new dress for a party. Or a roommate as cool as Gillian Chang or Lissa Mansfield. Or a guy noticing you after six months of being invisible. Before last term, of course I wanted those wishes to come true.
I should have been more careful.
Let me back up a little. My name is Carolina Isabella Aragon Velasquez . . . but that doesn’t fit on school admission forms, so when I started first grade, it got shortened up to Carolina Aragon—Carly to my friends. Up until I was a sophomore, I lived with my mother and father, my older sister Alana and little brother Antony in a huge house in Monte Sereno, just south of Silicon Valley. Papa’s company invented some kind of security software for stock exchanges, and he and everyone who worked for him got rich.
Then came Black Thursday and the stock market crash, and suddenly my mom was leaving him and going to live with her parents in Veracruz, Mexico, to be an artist and find herself. Alana finished college and moved to Austin, Texas, where we have lots of relatives. Antony, Papa, and I moved to a condo about the size of our old living room, and since Papa spends so much time on the road, where I’ve found myself since September is boarding school.
The spring term started in April, and as I got out of the limo Papa sends me back to Spencer Academy in every Sunday night—even though I’m perfectly capable of taking the train—I couldn’t help but feel a little bubble of optimism deep inside. Call me corny, but the news that Vanessa Talbot and Brett Loyola had broken up just before spring break had made the last ten days the happiest I’d had since my parents split up. Even flying to Veracruz, courtesy of Papa’s frequent flyer miles, and being introduced to my mother’s boyfriend hadn’t put a dent in it.
Ugh. Okay, I lied. So not going there.
Thinking about Brett now. Dark, romantic eyes. Curly dark hair, cut short because he’s the captain of the rowing team. Broad shoulders. Fabulous clothes he wears as if he doesn’t care where he got them.
Oh, yeah. Much better.
Lost in happy plans for how I’d finally get his attention (I was signing up to be a chem tutor first thing because, let’s face it, he needs me), I pushed open the door to my room and staggered in with my duffel bags.
My hands loosened and I dropped everything with a thud.
There were Vuitton suitcases all over the room. Enough for an entire family. In fact, the trunk was so big you could put a family in it—the kids, at least.
“Close the door, why don’t you?” said a bored British voice, with a barely noticeable roll on the r. A girl stepped out from behind the wardrobe door.
Red hair in an explosion of curls.
Fishnet stockings to here and glossy Louboutin ankle boots.
Blue eyes that grabbed you and made you wonder why she was so . . . not interested in whether you took another breath.
Ever.
How come no one had told me I was getting a roommate? And who could have prepared me for this, anyway?
“Who are you?”
“Mac,” she said, returning to the depths of the wardrobe. Most people would have said, “What’s your name?” back. She didn’t.
“I’m Carly.” Did I feel lame or what?
She looked around the door. “Pleasure. Looks like we’re to be roommates.” Then she went back to hanging things up.
There was no point in restating the obvious. I gathered my scattered brains and tried to remember what Mama had taught me that a good hostess was supposed to do. “Did someone show you where the dining room is? Supper is between five and six-thirty, and I usually—”
“Carrie. I expected my own room,” she said, as if I hadn’t been talking. “Whom do I speak to?”
“It’s Carly. And Ms. Tobin’s the dorm mistress for this floor.”
“Fine. What were you saying about tea?”
I took a breath and remembered that one of us was what my brother calls couth. As opposed to un. “You’re welcome to come with me and my friends if you want.”
Pop! went the latches on the trunk. She threw up the lid and looked at me over the top of it, her reddish eyebrows lifting in amusement.
“Thanks so much. But I’ll pass.”
Okay, even I have my limits. I picked up my duffel, dropped it on the end of my bed, and left her to it. Maybe by the time I got back from tea—er, supper—she’d have convinced Ms. Tobin to give her a room in another dorm.
The way things looked, this chica would probably demand the headmistress’s suite.
* * *
“What a mo guai nuer,” Gillian said over her tortellini and asparagus. “I can’t believe she snubbed you like that.”
“You of all people,” Lissa agreed, “who wouldn’t hurt someone’s feelings for anything.”
“I wanted to—if I could have come up with something scathing.” Lissa looked surprised, as if I’d shocked her. Well, I may not put my feelings out there for everyone to see, like Gillian does, but I’m still entitled to have them. “But you know how you freeze when you realize you’ve just been cut off at the knees?”
“What happened to your knees?” Jeremy Clay put his plate of linguine down and slid in next to Gillian. They traded a smile that made me feel sort of hollow inside—not the way I’d felt after Mac’s little setdown, but . . . like I was missing out on something. Like they had a secret and weren’t telling.
You know what? Feeling sorry for yourself is not the way to start off a term. I smiled at Jeremy. “Nothing. How was your break? Did you get up to New York the way you guys had planned?”
He glanced at Gillian. “Yeah, I did.”
Argh. Men. Never ask them a yes/no question. “And? Did you have fun? Shani said she had a blast after the initial shock.”
Gillian grinned at me. “That’s a nice way of saying that my grandmother scared the stilettos off her. At first. But then Nai-Nai realized Shani could eat anyone under the table, even my brothers, no matter what she put in front of her, so after that they were best friends.”
“My grandmother’s like that, too,” I said, nodding in sympathy. “She thinks I’m too thin, so she’s always making pots of mole and stuff. Little does she know.”
It’s a fact that I have way too much junk in my trunk. Part of the reason my focus is in history, with as many fashion design electives as I can get away with, is that when I make my own clothes, I can drape and cut to accentuate the positive and make people forget that big old negative following me around.
“You aren’t too thin or too fat.” Lissa is a perfect four. She’s also the most loyal friend in the world. “You’re just right. If I had your curves, I’d be a happy woman.”
Time to change the subject. The last thing I wanted to do was talk about my body in front of a guy, even if he belonged to someone else. “So, did you guys get to see Pride and Prejudice—The Musical? Shani said you were bribing someone to get tickets.”
“Close,” Gillian said. “My mom is on the orchestra’s board, so we got seats in the first circle. You’d have loved it. Costume heaven.”
“I would have.” I sighed. “Why did I have to go to Veracruz for spring break? How come I couldn’t have gone to New York, too?”
I hoped I sounded rhetorical. The truth was, there wasn’t any money for trips to New York to see the hottest musical on Broadway with my friends. Or for the clothes to wear once I got there—unless I made them myself.
“That’s it, then.” Gillian waved a grape tomato on the end of her fork. “Next break, you and Lissa are coming to see me. Not in the summer—no one in their right mind stays in the city in July. But at Christmas.”
“Maybe we’ll go to Veracruz,” Lissa suggested. “Or you guys can come to Santa Barbara and I’ll teach you to surf.”
“That sounds perfect,” I said. Either of Lissa’s options wouldn’t cost very much. New York, on the other hand, would. “I like warm places for my winter holidays.”
“Good point,” Gillian conceded. “So do I.”
“Notice how getting through the last term of junior year isn’t even on your radar?” Jeremy asked no one in particular. “It’s all about vacations with you guys.”
“Vacations are our reward,” Gillian informed him. “You have to have something to get you through finals.”
“Right, like you have to worry,” he scoffed, bumping shoulders with her in a chummy way.
“She does,” Lissa said. “She has to get me through finals.”
While everyone laughed, I got up and walked over to the dessert bar. Crème brulée, berry parfaits, and German chocolate cake. You know you’re depressed when even Dining Services’ crème brulée—which puts a dreamy look in the eyes of just about everyone who goes here—doesn’t get you excited.
I had to snap out of it. Thinking about all the things I didn’t have and all the things I couldn’t do would get me precisely nowhere. I had to focus on the good things.
My friends.
How lucky I was to have won the scholarship that got me into Spencer.
And how much luckier I was that in two terms, no one had figured out I was a scholarship kid. Okay, so Gillian is a scholarship kid, too, but her dad is the president of a multinational bank. She thinks it’s funny that he made her practice the piano so hard all those years, and that’s what finally got her away from him. Who is my father? No one. Just a hardworking guy. He was so proud of me when that acceptance letter came that I didn’t have the heart to tell him there was more to succeeding here than filling a minority quota and getting good grades.
Stop it. Just because you can’t flit off to New York to catch a show or order up the latest designs from Fashion Week doesn’t mean your life is trash. Get ahold of your sense of proportion.
I took a berry parfait—blueberries have lots of antioxidants—and turned back to the table just as the dining room doors opened. They seemed to pause in their arc, giving my new roommate plenty of time to stroll through before they practically genuflected closed behind her. She’d changed out of the fishnets into heels and a black sweater tossed over a simple leaf-green dress that absolutely screamed Paris—Rue Cambon, to be exact. Number 31, to be even more exact. Chanel Couture.
My knees nearly buckled with envy.
“Is that Carly’s roommate?” I heard Lissa ask.
Mac seemed completely unaware that everyone in the dining room was watching her as she floated across the floor like a runway model, collected a plate of Portobello mushroom ravioli and salad, and sat at the empty table next to the big window that faced out onto the quad.
Lissa was still gazing at her, puzzled. “I know I’ve seen her before.”
I hardly heard her.
Because not only had the redhead cut into line ahead of Vanessa Talbot, Dani Lavigne, and Emily Overton, she’d also invaded their prime real estate. No one sat at that table unless they’d sacrificed a freshman at midnight, or whatever it was that people had to do to be friends with them.
When Vanessa turned with her plate, I swear I could hear the collective intake of breath as her gaze locked on the stunning interloper sitting with her back to the window, calmly cutting her ravioli with the edge of her fork.
“Uh oh,” Gillian murmured. “Let the games begin.”
© 2008 by Shelley Adina.
Used by permission of the author and Hachette Book Group USA.
Sunday, January 4, 2009
Serial Readers Challenge 2009
It will never end - yes, I just signed up for this challenge - but the good news is that I have already read one book! Yeah! Go here to sign up - rules are just to read series/trilogies related by author - but all titles must be read in 2009 (but don't have to read in order!)
Here is my list so far:
- All About Us series
1. It's All About Us - Shelley Adina
2. Be Strong and Curvaceous - Shelley Adina
3. The Fruit of My Lipstick - Shelley Adina
- Charles Towne Belle Books
1. The Red Siren - M.L. Tyndall
- Daniel Vartanian series
- Carter House Girls series
1. Lost in Las Vegas - Melody Carlson
2. New York Debut - Melody Carlson
- Sister to Sister series
1. Age Before Beauty - Virginia Smith
- An Amanda Bell Brown Mystery
1. Deadly Charm - Claudia Mair Burney
2. Murder, Mayhem and a Fine Man - Claudia Mair Burney
- Highland Series
Be Strong and Curvaceous by Shelley Adina (Book Review)
Author: Shelley Adina
Publisher: Faith Words a division of Hachette Books
Genre: YA/Christian Fiction
Available: January 2009
Friday, January 2, 2009
Gatekeepers
It is time to play a Wild Card! Every now and then, a book that I have chosen to read is going to pop up as a FIRST Wild Card Tour. Get dealt into the game! (Just click the button!) Wild Card Tours feature an author and his/her book's FIRST chapter!
You never know when I might play a wild card on you!
Personal note: I have loved this series of books so far - please see my review of Gatekeepers.
Thomas Nelson (January 6, 2009)
Robert Liparulo has received rave reviews for both his adult novels (Comes a Horseman, Germ, and Deadfall) and the first two novels in his Dreamhouse Kings series for young adults (House of Dark Shadows, Watcher in the Woods). He is an avid scuba diver, swimmer, reader, traveler, and a law enforcement and military enthusiast. He lives in Colorado with his wife and four children.
Visit the author's website.
Here are some of his titles:
House of Dark Shadows (Dreamhouse Kings Book #1)
Watcher in the Woods: (Dreamhouse Kings Book #2)
Comes a Horseman
Germ
Deadfall
Product Details:
List Price: $ 14.99
Reading level: Young Adult
Hardcover: 304 pages
Publisher: Thomas Nelson (January 6, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1595544984
ISBN-13: 978-1595544988
AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:
Pinedale, California
Xander̢۪s words struck David̢۪s heart like a musket ball.
He reeled back, then grabbed the collar of his brother̢۪s grimy Confederate coat. His eyes stung, whether from the tears squeezing around them or the sand whipping through the room, he didn̢۪t know. He pulled his face to within inches of Xander̢۪s.
â€Å“You . . . you found her?†he said. â€Å“Xander, you found Mom?â€
He looked over Xander̢۪s shoulder to the portal door, which had slammed shut as soon as Xander stumbled through. The two boys knelt in the center of the antechamber. Wind billowed their hair. It whooshed in under the door, pulling back what belonged to the Civil War world from which Xander had just stepped. The smell of smoke and gunpowder was so strong, David could taste it.
He shook Xander. â€Å“Where is she? Why didn’t you bring her?â€
His heart was going crazy, like a ferret racing around inside his chest, more frantic than ever. Twelve-year-olds didn̢۪t have heart attacks, did they?
Xander leaned back and sat on his heels. His bottom lip trembled, and his chest rose and fell as he tried to catch his breath. The wind plucked a leaf from his hair, whirled it through the air, then sucked it under the door.
â€Å“Xander!†David said. â€Å“Where’s Mom?â€
Xander lowered his head. â€Å“I couldn’t . . .†he said. â€Å“I couldn’t get her. You gotta go over, Dae. You gotta bring her back!â€
â€Å“Me?†A heavy weight pushed on David’s chest, smashing the ferret between sternum and spine. He rose, leaped for the door, and tugged on the locked handle.
He wore a gray hat (â€Å“It’s a kepi,†Dad would tell him) and jacket, like Xander’s blue ones. They had discovered that it took wearing or holding three items from the antechamber to unlock the portal door. He needed one more.
â€Å“Xander, you said found her! â€
Xander shook his head. â€Å“I think I saw her going into a tent, but it was at the other end of the camp. I couldn’t get to her.â€
David’s mouth dropped open. â€Å“That’s not finding her! I thought I saw her, too, the other day in the World War II world. . .â€
â€Å“Dae, listen.†Xander pushed himself up and gripped David’s shoulders. â€Å“She saw the message we left. She saw Bob.â€
Bob was the cartoon face and family mascot since Dad was a kid, drawn on notes and birthday cards. When David and Xander had been in Ulysses S. Grant̢۪s Union camp the night before, Xander had drawn it on a tent. It was their way of letting Mom know they were looking for her.
â€Å“She wrote back!†Xander said. â€Å“David, she’s there!â€
â€Å“But . . .†David didn’t know if he wanted to scream or cry or punch his brother. â€Å“Why didn’t you go get her?â€
â€Å“Something was happening on the battlefield. They were rounding up all the soldiers and herding us toward the front line. I tried to get to her, but they kept grabbing me, pushing me out of camp. When I broke away—â€Å“ Xander’s face became hard. â€Å“They called me a deserter. That quick, I was a deserter. One of them shot at me! I barely got back to the portal.†He shook his head. â€Å“You gotta go! Now! Before she’s gone, or the portal changes, or . . . I don’t know.â€
Yes . . . no! David’s stomach hurt. His brain was throbbing against his skull. His broken arm started to ache again, and he rubbed the cast. â€Å“Xander, I can’t. They almost killed me yesterday.â€
â€Å“That’s because you were a gray-coat.†Xander began taking off his blue jacket. â€Å“Wear this one.â€
â€Å“Why can’t you? Just tell them—â€
â€Å“I’ll never make it,†Xander said. â€Å“They’ll throw me in the stockade for deserting—if they don’t shoot me first.â€
â€Å“They’ll do the same to me.†David hated how whiney it came out.
â€Å“You’re just a kid. They’ll see that.â€
â€Å“I’m twelve, Xander. Only three years younger than you.â€
â€Å“That’s the difference between fighting and not, Dae.†He held the jacket open. â€Å“I know it was really scary before, but this time you’ll be on the right side.â€
David looked around the small room. He said, â€Å“Where’s the rifle you took when you went over? The Harper’s Ferry musket?â€
His brother gazed at his empty hand. He scanned the floor. â€Å“I must have dropped it one of the times I fell. I was just trying to stay alive. I didn’t notice.†He shook the jacket. â€Å“Come on.â€
David shrugged out of the gray jacket he was wearing. He tossed it onto the bench and reluctantly slipped into the one Xander held. He pulled the left side over his cast.
Xander buttoned it for him. He said, â€Å“The tent I saw her go into was near the back of the camp, on the other side from where I drew Bob.†He lifted the empty sleeve and let it flop down. He smiled. â€Å“Looks like you lost your arm in battle.â€
â€Å“See? They’ll think I can fight, that I have fought.â€
â€Å“I was just kidding.†He took the gray kepi off David’s head and replaced it with the blue one. Then he turned to the bench and hooks, looking for another item.
â€Å“Xander, listen,†David said. â€Å“You don’t know what’s been happening here. There are two cops downstairs.â€
Xander froze in his reach for a canteen. â€Å“What?†His head pivoted toward the door opposite the portal, as though he could see through it into the hallway beyond, down the stairs, around the corner, and into the foyer. Or like he expected the cops to burst through. â€Å“What are they doing here?â€
â€Å“They’re trying to get us out of the house. Taksidian’s with them.†Just thinking of the creepy guy who was responsible for his broken arm frightened David—but not as much as the thought of getting hauled away when they were so close to rescuing Mom. â€Å“Gimme that,†he said, waggling his fingers at the canteen.
Xander snatched it off the hook and looped the strap over David’s head. â€Å“Where’s Dad?â€
â€Å“They put him in handcuffs. He told me to come get you. That’s why I was here when you came through.â€
â€Å“Handcuffs!â€
â€Å“And one more thing,†David said. He closed his eyes, feeling like the jacket had just gained twenty pounds. â€Å“Clayton, that kid who wanted to pound me at school? He came through the portal in the linen closet.†He opened one eye to see his brother’s shocked expression.
â€Å“How long was I gone?†Xander said. â€Å“Where is he now?â€
â€Å“I pushed him back in. He returned to the school, but he might . . . come back.â€
â€Å“Great.†Xander glanced over his shoulder at the hallway door again, then back at David. â€Å“Anything else I should know?â€
David shook his head. â€Å“I guess if I die, I won’t have to go to school tomorrow.†He smiled weakly.
The school year—seventh grade for David, tenth for Xander—had started just yesterday: two days of classes. Mom had been kidnapped the day before that. David couldn’t believe they’d even gone to school under the circumstances, but Dad, who was the new principal, had insisted they keep up normal appearances so they wouldn’t attract suspicion.
Lot of good it did, David thought, thinking of the cops downstairs.
â€Å“I don’t know,†Xander said. â€Å“Dad would probably figure out a way to get your body there.â€
David̢۪s expression remained grim.
â€Å“You’ll be fine.â€
â€Å“Don’t get taken away,†David told his brother. â€Å“Don’t leave with me over there. Don’t leave me alone in this house when I come back. Don’t—â€Å“
Xander touched his fingers to David’s lips. â€Å“I won’t leave,†he said. â€Å“I’ll go see what’s happening downstairs, but I won’t leave. No way, no how. Okay? Besides—â€Å“ He smiled, but David saw how hard it was for him to do it. â€Å“You’ll have Mom with you when you come back. Right?â€
It was David’s turn to smile, and he found it wasn’t so hard to do. â€Å“Yeah.†He turned, took a deep breath, and opened the portal door.
Gatekeepers by Robert Liparulo (Book 3 in Dreamhouse Kings series) - Book Review
Author: Robert Liparulo
Publisher: Thomas Nelson
Genre: YA fiction
First Sentence: Xander's words struck David's heart like a musket ball.
I am so very glad that I was able to read the first three books in this series so closely together. My only gripe is that I have to wait until July for Timescape - the 4th book in this series!
In Gatekeepers, we again join Xander, David, Toria and their father, Edward, in the search for their mother, G(ertrude). As they discover more rules about the portals, they also encounter more danger - both in their own world and the world behind the antechambers. Men - warriors - are now coming through the portals and are after the children! Come see how Xander, David and Toria fight off three of these men in the mysterious clearing in the woods - how they are able to fly out of the way of danger!
We also meet Jesse, a very elderly man who has a gift of "feeling" when history has been changed. He also has a link to the mysterious King house, as well as to the King family themselves. He is able to help the children with their knowledge of the portals - but will he have the time to share all of his secrets, or will "time" want him back.
The children may not be able to rescue their mother during this book - but come and find out who they do meet in the other worlds along the way. I guarantee you will not want to put it down!
See my other reviews for the first two books in the series: House of Dark Shadows and Watcher in the Woods.Thursday, January 1, 2009
Watcher in the Woods by Robert Liparulo-(Book 2 in Dreamhouse King series)- (Book Review)
Young Readers Challenge
- More Fun With Maisy - Lucy Cousins
- Katy Duck dance star - Alyssa Satin Capucilli
- If You Give a Mouse a Cookie - Laura Joffe Numeroff
- Pie in the Sky - Lois Ehlert
- Get to Work, Trucks! - Don Carter
- The Worm Family - Tony Johnston
- This Train - Paul Collicutt
- The Smushy Bus - Leslie Helakoski (2)
- Matthew's Truck - Katherine Ayres
- Good Morning Engines - Britt Allcroft
- Alexander's Pretending Day - Bunny Crumpacker
- Motor Graders - Jean Eick
- The Wolf Who Cried Boy - Bob Hartman
- Curious George Visits a Police Station
- Going Places
- The little mouse, the red ripe strawberry, and the big hungry bear - Don Wood
- Toy Story II - Play a Sound
- Blue's Music Maker - Play a Song
- Hello, Robots - Bob Staake (3)
- Reptar to the Rescue - Stephanie St. Pierre
- Young MacDonald - David Milgrim
- Little Boy - Alison McGhee and Peter Reynolds
- The Night Before Christmas Pop Up Story Book (Better than Broccoli Books)
- Nursery Rhymes (Wee Willie Winkie and Other Rhymes) Pop Up Book (Better than Broccoli)
- Nursery Rhymes (Humpty Dumpty and Other Rhymes) Pop Up Book (Better than Broccoli)
- My Subway Ride - Paul Dubois Jacobs and Jennifer Swender
- Santa's Workshop Pop Up Story Book (Better than Broccoli Books)
- Nursery Rhymes (Mary, Mary Quite Contrary and Other Rhymes) Pop Up Book (Better than Broccoli)
- Old MacDonald Had a Workshop - Lisa Shulman
- Itchy Itchy Chicken Pox
- Walter the Farting Dog - William Kotzwinkle (2)
- Curious George Goes to the Beach - Margret and H.A. Rey
- Sleepy Cadillac - Thacher Hurd
- Curious George and the Dump Truck - Margret and H.A. Rey
- Shape Space - Cathryn Falwell
- Maisy's Morning on the Farm - Lucy Cousins
- Alphabet City
- Kipper's Toy Box - Mick Inkpen
- The Bestest Mom - Susan Hood
- Sailor Boy Jig - Margaret Weis Brown
- Hoppity Skip Little Chick - Jo Brown
- Freight Train - Donald Crews
- Curious George and the Hot Air Balloon - Margret and H.A. Rey
- Happy Birthday Spongebob - J-P Chanda
- Scooby Doo and the Disappearing Donuts - Gail Herman
- If I Could Drive a Loader - Michael Teitelbaum
- If I Could Drive a Tow Truck - Michael Teitelbaum
- If I Could Drive a Fire Truck - Michael Teitelbaum
- If I Could Drive a Dump Truck - Michael Teitelbaum