Where I share my love of books with reviews, features, giveaways and memes. Family and needlepoint are thrown in from time to time.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Read-a-thon is coming!

Birthmarked

Saturday is the Read-a-thon!  Yippee!  I am looking forward to a day of reading.  It is supposed to be sunny here so I will be able to read in our new 3-season room!  We were only able to use it a few times before the weather got too cold last fall, so it still has the new room feel!

Here is a list of books that I get to choose from:



As you can see I am giving myself a pretty big list to choose from.  Last year I got bogged down in a book and I don't want that to happen this year!  Happy reading everyone!

Meeting Elizabeth Berg

Last night I got to go to an author reading and meet Elizabeth Berg!  She is the author of 18 books and her latest was just being released yesterday.  It is called The Last Time I Saw You: A Novel.  I am currently reading Home Safe: A Novel and have Joy School on audio to listen to.  I purchased a copy of The Last Time I Saw You and had it autographed to give away to one of my readers!  That post will come later after I get my pictures uploaded!  Needless to say - I had a great night!

Waiting on Wednesday: Sparrow Rock

This week's pre-publication "can't-wait-to-read" selection is:


Sparrow Rock
by Nate Kenyon
Publication date: Apr 27, 2010

Prepare yourself for an unforgettable experience in fear.

They were just a group of high school kids looking for a place to party. They didn’t know the end of the world was coming. Now, alone and trapped below ground, they are being stalked—and the creatures that come to visit them through the dirt and ash are like nothing anyone has ever seen before.

There is a new ruling life form on earth, and six humans are the only remaining prey.

Welcome to your worst nightmare. Welcome to…

SPARROW ROCK

Read the first chapter of Sparrow Rock.
What are you waiting for?


Waiting on Wednesdays is hosted by Jill at Breaking the Spine.

 
Sparrow Rock
Publisher/Publication Date: Leisure Books, Apr 27, 2010
ISBN: 978-0843963779
336 pages

First Wild Card Tour: Asking for Trouble

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old...or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!



Today's Wild Card author is:


and the book:

Tyndale House Publishers (March 4, 2010)
***Special thanks to Christy Wong of Tyndale House Publishers for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:



Best-selling author Sandra Byrd has published nearly three dozen books in the Christian market, including her latest series, French Twist, which includes the Christy Award finalist Let Them Eat Cake (WaterBrook Press, 2007) and its sequel, Bon Appétit (WaterBrook Press, 2008). Many of her acclaimed fiction and nonfiction books target the tween and young adult markets. She has also published a book for new moms entitled Heartbeats. Several of Sandra’s shorter works have appeared in periodicals such as Relevant, Clubhouse, Pockets, Decision, and Guideposts. For the past seven years, she has shared her secrets with the many students she mentors through the Christian Writers Guild. Before turning to full-time writing, Sandra was an acquisitions editor in the ABA market. She lives in the Seattle, Washington, area with her husband and two children.

Visit the author's website.



Product Details:

List Price: $6.99
Reading level: Ages 9-12
Paperback: 272 pages
Publisher: Tyndale House Publishers (March 4, 2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1414325975
ISBN-13: 978-1414325972

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


I hung back at the doorway to the cafeteria of my new supercool British school, Wexburg Academy. Most of the lunch tables were already packed, and the room was buzzing with chatter. The populars, whom I'd secretly nicknamed the Aristocats, commanded an entire table right in the center of the room. Their good looks and posh accents made up the sun around which all other tables orbited. The normal kids were in the second circle, arranged by friends or clubs or activities. The drama table was on the outer edge of the room, and so were the geeks, the nerds, and the punk wannabes--way out there like Neptune, but still planets. Most everyone had a group. I didn't.

Okay, so there was one table with lots of room. The leftovers table. It might as well have been the dark side of the moon.

No way.

I skipped lunch--again--and headed to the library. One of the computers was available and I logged on, desperately hoping for an e-mail from Seattle.

There was an e-mail from my grandmother reminding me to floss because British dentists only cleaned adult teeth.

Spam from Teen Vogue.

An invitation to join the Prince Harry fan club--​I opened it and gave it a quick scan. I'd consider it more later.

And . . . one from Jen!

I clicked open the e-mail from my best friend at home--well, it had been my home till a couple of months ago--hoping for a lunch full of juicy news served alongside tasty comments about how she missed me and was planning stuff for my next visit home. I craved something that would take me the whole lunch period to read and respond to and remind me that I did have a place somewhere in this universe.

From: Jen
To: Savannah


Hey, Fortune Cookie, so how's it going? Met the Queen yet? LOL. Sorry I haven't written too much. It's been so busy. Samantha took the position you'd been promised on the newspaper staff. She's brand new, but then again you would have been too. It seemed strange without you at first, but I think she'll do okay--maybe even better than okay. And hey, life has changed for everyone, right? Things are crazy busy at school, home, and church. We hang out a lot more now that a bunch of us are driving. Will write again in a few weeks.

Miss you!
Jen



A few weeks! My lungs filled with air, and I let it out slowly, deflating like a balloon with a slow leak. I poised my hands over the keyboard to write a response but just . . . couldn't. What would I say? It had already been weeks since we'd last e-mailed. Most of my friends texted instead of e-mailing anyway, but texting across the Atlantic Ocean cost way too much. And the truth was . . .

I'd moved, and they'd moved on.

I logged off the computer and sat there for a minute, blinking back tears. Jen hadn't meant to forget me. I was simply out of her orbit now.

I pretended to read Sugar magazine online, but mostly I was staring at the clock, passing the time till I could respectably head to my next class.

Five minutes before class I swung my book bag onto my shoulder and headed down the hall. Someone was stapling flyers to the wall. “Hi, Hazelle.”

“Hullo, Savannah.” She breezed by me, stapling another pink flyer farther down the wall. We had math class together--oh yeah, maths, as the Brits called it--first period. I'd tried to make friends with her; I'd even asked her if she'd like to sit together in lunch, but she'd crisply informed me that she sat at the table with the other members of the newspaper staff.

She didn't bother with small talk now either, but went on stapling down the hall. I glanced at one of the flyers, and one sentence caught my eye right away: Looking for one experienced journalist to join the newspaper staff.

I yanked the flyer off the wall and jammed it into my bag. I was experienced. Wasn't I?

A nub of doubt rose inside me--the kind that popped up, unwelcome, anytime I tried to rationalize something that wasn't exactly true or right.

This time I swallowed it back. I thought back to Jen's e-mail that kind of felt like a polite dismissal. I lived in London now.

It was time to take matters into my own hands.

Asking For Trouble by Sandra Byrd

Title: Asking for Trouble
Author: Sandra Byrd
Publisher: Tyndale House Publishers


My synopsis/review:  Savannah and her family have just moved outside of London.  She is in high school and has to try to make new friends, new activities, and her family have to find a new church. 

Savannah, or Savvy as her family calls her, was set to be a reporter for her school paper back home.  This would have been her first year on the paper, but her freshman English teacher highly recommended her.  Unfortunately it is not that easy to get on the paper at Wexler Academy - her new high school.  It isn't even easy to make friends.  Then a position opens up on the paper.

Savvy fibs a little by saying she has experience, but after Jack, the editor, gives her a shot, she fesses up that this was to be her first year.  He is not willing to take the chance on her, as the paper is floundering, but because she is desperate to be a part of something she agrees to deliver the papers around school.  Not really the job that she wants, but she hopes she can make it work for her.

After a little "investigative reporting" she discovers that the students are looking for something a little more on their level and not so "academic".  After some brainstorming, she comes up with the idea of an advice column.  She suggests it to Jack and the newspaper team decide to go for it. 

Through a writing contest, Savvy wins the opportunity to be the writer of the column.  This is kept a secret in case her American way of writing isn't suitable for the British students.  She prays that God will give her wisdom to do a good job.  She soon realizes that God is going to make her "live and learn" the questions and answers that she is expected to answer.

This book is being marketed to ages 9-12.  I think that is appropriate even though Savvy is a little older than that.  It has some good lessons and some good Scripture references.  Savvy realizes that she has pushed God away when they moved - and that when she is at her loneliest is when she needs Him the most. 

I am definitely going to recommend this one to my nieces.

~I was provided this book for review for a First Wild Card Tour by Tyndale.~



Asking for Trouble
Publisher/Publication Date: Tyndale House Publishers, Mar 2010
ISBN: 978-1-4143-2597-2
272 pages
Age recommended: 9-12 years

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Giveaway of FOXY by Pam Grier


Foxy: My Life in Three Acts
by Pam Grier


Beautiful, bold, and bad, Pam Grier burst onto the movie scene in the 1970s, setting the screen on fire and forever changing the country's view of African American actresses. With a killer attitude and body to match, Grier became the ultimate fantasy of men everywhere. But she quickly proved that she was more than just a desirable film goddess. She had the brains, courage, and tenacity to sustain a career that would span more than 30 years. In FOXY, she chronicles the good, bad, and steamy highlights in her life and career.

GIVEAWAY!!

I have three copies of Foxy to giveaway courtesy of Hachette Books. 

For your first entry (MUST DO THIS ONE FOR ANY OTHER ENTRIES TO COUNT) tell me what you remember most from the 70's - or, if you weren't alive then - tell me anything you know about the 70's! Oh - and leave your email address.


For additional entries you can sign up to follow through google friends (old followers let me know), Twitter or post it on your blog. Each entry must have it's own comment. (Four entries total.)

This giveaway is for U.S./Canada only - no PO boxes and will end Apr 20!
 
 
 

Teaser Tuesday: 4-6-2010




TEASER TUESDAYS asks you to:
Grab your current read.
Let the book fall open to a random page.
Share with us two (2) “teaser” sentences from that page, somewhere between lines 7 and 12.
You also need to share the title of the book that you’re getting your “teaser” from … that way people can have some great book recommendations if they like the teaser you have given!
Please avoid spoilers!

But then I see Alex and Julie together, talking quietly, playing chess, and I know that if people had seen Matt with Jon or me, pre-Syl Matt, that is, they would have fallen in love with us the way Dad has with Alex and Julie.  If it had been Matt and Jon and me and we didn't have any parents, any family except each other, and people had reached out, included us in their families, it would have meant everything to us. (This World We Live In by Susan Beth Pfeffer, p117)

This World We Live In
Publisher/Publication Date: Apr 1, 2010, Harcourt Children's Books
ISBN: 978-0547248042
256 pages

Monday, April 5, 2010

The Bride Collector by Ted Dekker



Title: The Bride Collector
Author: Ted Dekker
Publisher: Center Street/Hachette Books

My synopsis/thoughts: We meet Brad Raines, FBI agent, and his partner Nikki after the serial killer takes his fourth victim.  All have been beautiful women, left behind with only a bridal veil - hence the serial killer has been dubbed The Bride Collector.  With the fourth victim, however, comes a note that gives Brad his first glimpse of what the killer is really like.  This note leads them to the Center for Wellbeing and Intelligence.

This Center is home to mentally ill patients who are also highly gifted individuals.  There we meet a group of patients who Brad calls on to give him a different aspect of his killer.  Paradise is a young girl - schizophrenic and agoraphobic - who appears to have the ability to see someone's last moments if she touches their dead body.  Roudy has a brilliant mind that works at a much greater pace than anyone's around him.  Allison is the ex-nun who facillitates the meeting up of her patients and Brad.  She enables us to see the patients for their abilities and not their "illness".

We also meet the killer early on in the book.  I love the fact that you don't go through the thriller trying to figure out who is doing the killing - but instead, you get to try to figure out WHY he is killing and how everyone is connected.  Especially after the killer starts making it personal with Brad. 

I noticed in someone else's review that they brought up that Mr. Dekker is able to write these wonderful thriller's with very graphic portrayals and yet can do so without using any profanity.  Well done!  I love thrillers, and sometimes feel that the use of profanity is a "lazy" effort to portray "bad" people or situations.  (Ok - I feel the wrath of some authors coming on here - and no, I am not a writer so this is just MHO.)  I can still remember a poster from my highschool English class (and we are going back a ways here!) that said something to the effect "Profanity is a strong effort of a weak mind to express itself forcefully."  I will get off my soapbox now...

I'll just finish by saying I loved this book.  Highly recommend it - and can't wait to read another my Ted Dekker.  I actually have Burn smoldering in my TBR pile!

The Bride Collector is not due out until April 13 - but if you preorder - you can receive a free PDF of Ted Dekker's first unpublished novel.

Hook up with Ted Dekker on these sites:
Facebook
Twitter
Website

The Bride Collector
Publisher/Publication Date: Center Street, April 13, 2010
ISBN: 978-1-59995-196-6
416 pages

Sunday, April 4, 2010

It's Monday! What Are You Reading?



What are you reading on Mondays is now being hosted by Sheila at One Person's Journey - You can hook up with the Mr. Linky there with your own post - but be sure and let me know what you are reading too!

Don't forget to check out all the giveaways in my right sidebar - especially my Big Birthday Bash!

Currently Reading:


1. The Poacher's Son (Mike Bowditch Mysteries)by Paul Doiron - I hate it when I get into a book I really enjoy - and then can't seem to get back to it to finish it!

2This World We Live In (The Last Survivors, Book 3) by Susan Beth Pfeffer - I am reading this through Net Galley and actually had forgotten about it.  I saw someone else's review and knew I had to get back to it.  I loved the first 2 books in this series!


New this week: 

1. This Little Prayer of Mine by Anthony DeStefano

2. Asking for Trouble (London Confidential) by Sandra Byrd

3. My Own Personal Soap Opera: Looking for reality in all the wrong places by Libby Malin - Watch for an interview with Libby this week also.

4.  A Certain "Je Ne Sais Quoi": The Origin of Foreign Words Used in English by Chloe Rhodes

Current audio book:

1. Twilight (The Twilight Saga, Book 1) by Stephanie Meyer- Back to the grind of driving to school tomorrow so will be able to start listening to this again!


Books reviewed last week:

 1. Montana Legacy by R.C. Ryan - Enjoyed this light romantic mystery - waiting for book 2 in the series!


2. Wake by Lisa McMann - audio version - Liked this one so much already checked out book 2. 


3. An Absence So Great by Jan Kirkpatrick - Just ok for me - felt I lost something by not reading the first book in the series.


4. A Touch of Scandal by Jennifer Haymore - Pretty good romance - book 2 in a series


5. The Edge of Light by Ann Shorey
6. The Promise of Morning by Ann Shorey - First 2 books in the Beldon Grove series - thoroughly enjoyed them both!

Waiting for review: 

1. Before I Fall by Lauren Oliver


2. Dear John by Nicholas Sparks


3. 101 Glam Girl Ways to an Ultra Chic Lifestyle: A Cheeky Book with Tidbits of Advice for a Glamorous Lifestyle by Dawn Del Russo

4.Chosen: The Lost Diaries of Queen Esther (Lost Loves of the Bible) by Ginger Garret

5.  Disrupting Grace: A Story of Relinquishment and Healing by Kristen Richburg

6.  The Bride Collector by Ted Dekker


Ready - Set - Read!

Happy Easter!

So, even though today was a little chilly - and we ended up getting some thunderstorms tonight - earlier this week we hit an unseasonably warm 80 degrees.   This is what happens to chocolate bunnies hidden in cars when that happens:


But - thankfully we had other goodies to fill the space left by these bunnies!  And we ended the day with some real eggheads!

New books added to Birthday Bash Giveaway

Update!  Just added new books to my Birthday Bash Giveaway - If you haven't entered yet, there is still time.  Enter here.  There are still more books to come!

In My Mailbox/Mailbox Monday (April 4 and 5)

Mailbox Monday is hosted at The Printed Page . Please visit Kristi and Marcia  and take a look at what packages everybody else got this week!


Numbers
by Rachel Ward

Since the day her mother died, Jem has known about the numbers.

Numbers that pop into her head when she looks into someone's eyes. They're dates, the numbers. Dates predicting with brute accuracy each person's death.

Burdened by such grim knowledge, Jem avoids relationships. Until she meets Spider, another outsider, and takes a chance. Maybe they can find happiness together, if only in the brief time that remains before his expiration date.

But on a trip to London, Jem foresees a chilling chain of events:
The city's a target.
The clock's running out.
The countdown is on to a blowup!


Maid of Murder
(An India Hayes Mystery)
by Amanda Flower
(review request from the author)

India Hayes is a lot of things. . .starving artist who pays the rent as a college librarian, daughter of liberal activists, sister of an emotional mathematician, tenant of a landlady who has kissed the Blarney Stone one too many times, and a bridesmaid six times over. But she's about to step into the most challenging role of her life: amateur sleuth.

Childhood friend and now knockout beauty, Olivia Blocken is back in town to wed her bodybuilder fiance with India a reluctant attendant. . . not just because the bridesmaid's dress is a hideous mess, but because she's betraying her brother. Mark still carries a torch for the bride who once broke his heart and sent his life into a tailspin.

When Olivia turns up dead in the Martin College fountain and the evidence points to Mark, India must unmask the real culprit while juggling a furious and grieving Mother of the Bride, an annoyingly beautiful Maid of Honor, a set of hippie-generation parents, the police detective who once dated her sister and is showing a marked liking for her, and a provost itching to fire someone, anyone -- maybe even a smart-mouthed librarian.

India's investigation leads her on a journey through childhood memories that she'd much rather have left in the schoolyard, but to avoid becoming the next victim, it is a path she must follow.

Maid of Murder is a fast-paced, laugh-out-loud mystery set in an amusing world of academia. Readers will fall in love with India Hayes' fierce loyalty and wit.




Keeper
by Kathi Appelt
(reviewing for Simon & Schuster Kid's Division)

Blue moon, magic moon. . . good for wishing.

To ten-year-old Keeper, this moon is her chance to fix all that has gone wrong. . . and so much has gone wrong.

But she knows who can make things right again: Meggie Marie, her mermaid mother who swam away when Keeper was just three. A blue moon calls the mermaids to gather at the sandbar, and that's exactly where Keeper is headed -- in a small boat, in the middle of the night, with ony her dog, BD (Best Dog), and a seagull named Captain. When the riptide pulls at the boat, tugging her away from the shore and deep into the rough waters of the Gulf of Mexico, panic sets in and the fairy tales that lured her out there go tumbling into the waves. Maybe the blue moon isn't magic and maybe the sandbar won't sparkle with mermaids, and maybe -- oh, no. . ."Maybe" is just too difficult to bear.


The Marrowbone Marble Company
by M. Glenn  Taylor
(received for review from ECCO via Shelf Awareness)

Moving from the hills of West Virginia to the islands of the Pacific and back, a sweeping novel of love and war, power and oppression, faith and deception, from the author of The Ballad of Trenchmouth Taggart, a finalist for the 2009 National Book Critic's Circle Award.

1941. Orphan Loyal Ledford works the swing shift tending the furnace at the Mann Glass factory in Huntington, West Virginia. He courts Rachel, the boss's daughter, a company nurse with spike straight posture and coal black hair. But when Pearl Harbor is attacked, Ledford, like so many young men of his time, sets his life on a new course. . .

Upon his return from service in the war, Ledford starts a family with Rachel, but he chafes under the authority at Mann Glass. he is a lost man, disconnected from the present and haunted by his violent past, until he meets his cousins, the Bonecutter brothers. Their land, the mysterious, elemental Marrowbone Cut, calls to Ledford, and it is there, with help from an unlikely bunch, that the Marrowbone Marble Company is slowly forged. Over the next two decades, the factory town becomes a vanguard of the civil rights movement and the war on poverty, a home for those intent on change. Such a home inevitably invites trouble, and Ledford must fight for his family.

Returning to the West Virginia territory of his critically acclaimed Ballad of Trenchmouth Taggart, M. Glenn Taylor recounts the transformative journey of a man and his community. Told in clean and powerful prose in the tradition of Cormac McCarthy and John Irving, The Marrowbone Marble Company takes a harrowing look at the issues of race and class throughout the tumultuous 1950s and '60s. It is a story of struggle and loss, righteousness and redemption, and it can only be found in the hills of Marrowbone, in the deft storytelling of M. Glenn Taylor.



Alexandra, Gone
by Anna McPartlin
(reviewing for Simon & Schuster Gallery Books)

Letting go for good. . .

Once, Jane Moore and Alexandra Walsh were inseparable, sharing secrets and stolen candy, plotting their futures together. But when Jane became pregnant at seventeen, they drifted slowly apart. Jane has spent the years since raising her son, now seventeen himself, on her own, running a gallery, managing her sister's art career, and looking after their volatile mother -- all the while trying not to resent the limited choices life has give her.

Then a quirk of fate and a faulty elevator bring Jane into contact with Tom, Alexandra's husband, who has some shocking news. Alexandra disappeared from a south Dublin suburb months ago, and Tom has been searching fruitlessly for her. Jane offers to help, as do the elevator's other passengers -- Jane's brilliant but self-absorbed sister, Elle, and Leslie Sheehan, a reclusive web designer who's ready to step back into the world again. And as Jane quickly realizes, Tom isn't the only one among them who's looking for something. . .or traveling toward unexpected revelations about love, life, and what it means to let go, in every sense.

In this insightful and irresistible novel, by turns profound, poignant and laugh-out-loud funny, acclaimed Irish writer Anna McPartlin tells a story of friendship and love, of the families we are born into and the ones we create for ourselves, and of the hope and strength that remain when we find the courage to leave the past behind at last.



Necessary Heartbreak
by Michael J. Sullivan
(reviewing for Simon & Schuster Gallery Books)

An extraordinary journey back in time shows a struggling single dad that the faith he's lost is still alive -- and stronger than ever. . .

Michael Stewart has weathered his share of hardships: a troubled childhood, the loss of his mother, even the degradation of living on the city streets. Now he's raising his teenaged daughter, Elizabeth, on his own and doing the best he can at work and at home. But he's turned his back on his faith -- that is, until the morning Michael and Elizabeth volunteer for a food pantry at their local church.  While storing boxes in the basement, they step through a mysterious door. . . and find themselves in first-century Jerusalem during the tumultuous last week of Jesus Christ's life. It is a dangerous and violent place, where doing what your heart tells you is right can get you imprisoned -- or worse -- and they are thankful to take refuge with a kind widow. But when they come face-to-face with Judas Iscariot and the condemned Christ himself, Michael realizes that before they can escape Jerusalem, he must experience history's most necessary and shattering heartbreak -- and that pain and loss must happen if Michael is to be set free: to live, love, and reclaim the blessings he has in the present day.


Three Wishes
by Carey Goldberg, Beth Jones, and Pamela Ferdinand
(reviewing for Hachette Books)

The true story of best friends who find that the moment they stop waiting for fairy-tale endings, their "happily ever afters" begin.

Carey, Beth, and Pam, all successful journalists, have good luck in friends, but terrible luck in relationships. Which makes it more difficult to get what they truly desire: children. And time is running out.

After years of chasing headlines from Manhattan to Moscow, Carey returns home and is the first to abandon the traditional path to motherhood. She decides to go it alone, finds the perfect anonymous donor, and buys eight vials of his sperm. Maybe it's newfound confidence from taking control of her destiny. Maybe it's sheer coincidence. But on the day the vials arrive, she meets a man online. They fall in love. And she gets pregnant the old-fashioned way.

Carey passes the vials, like a talisman to Beth, who has recovered from a wrenching divorce, a predatory lawyer, and poor choices made by unscrupulous financiers. But before she can use the vials, Beth meets a man on an ice-climbing trip. She too falls in love.  And gets pregnant. So she gives the vials to Pam, an eternal romantic. Pam will never stop searching for the love of her life, but she's ready to be a single mother. Then the magic strikes again. Her wish is fulfilled at an observatory under the stars.

Is it lucky sperm? Kismet? Or shared hope, determination, and resilience that pave the way to these happy endings?  Despite soured relationships and crushing losses, three women become three families, reveling in the shared joys of love, friendship, and never giving up.


 



Code Blue
(Prescription for Trouble Series)
by Richard L. Mabry, MD
(For a First Wild Card Tour)

Who wants Dr. Cathy Sewell dead?

For Dr. Cathy Sewell, Code Blue means more than just the cardiac emergencies she faces -- it's the state of her life when the return to her hometown doesn't bring the peace she so desperately needs.

The town doctors resent the fact that she's not only a newcomer but also a woman, and the devastating results from one of her prescriptions may mean the end of her practice.

As two men compete for affection, an enemy wants her out of town -- or possibly even dead.

What great books did you get this week?

Saturday, April 3, 2010

First Two Books in the Beldon Grove Series by Ann Shorey (Book Reviews)


Title: The Edge of Light (Book One in the Beldon Grove Series)
Author: Ann Shorey
Publisher: Revell/Baker

About the book: It is the summer of 1838 in St. Lawrenceville, Missouri, and Molly McGarvie's life is about to change forever. When her beloved Samuel succumbs to cholera, Molly is heartbroken but resolves to take care of herself and her children.

When Samuel's unscrupulous brother takes over the family business and leaves Molly to fend for herself, she knows she must head out on her own. It is a dangerous journey, and along the way she must face the loss of another family member. Somehow she must find a way to make a living, restore her family, and fend off some overeager suitors.

My thoughts: We meet Molly and her family just as her husband is returning home ill - he dies within the week and leaves Molly, pregnant, and with 3 other children.  Molly, knowing she has to keep things together for her children, expects to take over her husband's brickyard - but her brother-in-law shows her papers that says his brother willed it all to him if he died.  Molly can't believe it, but in 1838 there wasn't much a woman could do to fight it.  She sends word to her brother Matthew, a pastor in Illinois, that she needs a place to stay.  Along with Dr. Karl Spengler, they travel to move Molly and her family back to Illinois.  Molly is forced to leave Betsy, a friend since childhood, but also her slave, behind - again because of her brother-in-law.  She vows that she will save enough money to "buy" her back and bring her to Illinois.

Tragedy strikes along the way, and Molly loses a child even as another is born.  Her daughter Lily is born just after they cross the river into Illinois.  Molly blames Karl for her loss, and can hardly bring herself to look him in the eye.  Once in Beldon Grove Molly strives to find a place of her own and raise enough money to buy Betsy.  She needs Betsy so she can go look for her lost child.  She believes him to be alive, even though everyone else is sure he is dead.

Even though everything seems to be against her, I felt that Molly never gave up hope.  She kept striving to take care of her family, and kept the thought that her child was still alive - even though she had to keep this to herself as everyone pretty much thought she was crazy. She eventually learns a hard lesson where Karl is concerned and learns about the value of forgiveness.

I love reading about this era in our country.  I don't want to say that life was simpler, as people definitely had a lot more work - from baking bread to the way they did the laundry to plowing the fields - but the values were different.  God and family were truly valued.  You had what you needed and not a lot of excess.  Material things didn't cloud peoples values or lives.  I think this book shows how hard frontier life was, yet the riches could be very great.







Title: The Promise of Morning (Book 2 in the Beldon Grove series)
Author: Ann Shorey
Publisher: Revell/Baker

About the book: Life in Beldon Grove on the Illinois frontier in the 1840's isn't easy. For Ellie Craig, the graves of her three infant children make it unbearably lonely, despite the love of her husband Matthew. When she uncovers a family secret that suggests she may not be as alone as she thought, Ellie is determined to find the truth.

Meanwhile, Matthew Craig faces controversy in the church he pastors when a man arrives in town claiming to be both a minister and the son of the town's founder.  Will Matthew find the courage to reclaim his church? Or will he return to itinerant preaching, leaving Ellie even more alone than before?

My thoughts:  This book picks up about 7 years after the first one ends.  This time, the focus is on Matthew - Molly's brother - and his wife Ellie.  They have lost 3 children in succession and Matthew feels he has lost a little of Ellie with each child.  Add to that the arrival of a man claiming to be the son of the founder of Beldon Grove.  He feels as if he is "entitled" to the town - that it is his inheritance.  He also claims to be a preacher, which steps on the Matthew's toes as he has worked a long time to establish the only church in Beldon Grove.

As he and his wife drift further apart, Ellie makes a startling discovery about his family that causes her trust in what she knows to weaken.  Matthew, no longer being able to lean on Ellie, feels he must leave his church due to certain townspeople not believing he should be a preacher.  This causes him to doubt his calling and he sets out to resign.  Instead he returns to being an itinerant preacher and widens the gap with Ellie, as this leaves her alone even more.

I am enjoying this series immensely and am looking forward to To Number the Stars, which sounds like it is going to focus on one of Molly's daughters.

~The Edge of Light was borrowed from my local library, but I want to thank Baker Publishing for the complimentary copy of The Promise of Morning.~

The Edge of Light
Publisher/Publication Date: Baker Publishing, Jan 2009
ISBN: 978-0-8007-3330-8
318 pages

The Promise of Morning
Publisher/Publication Date: Baker Publishing, Mar 2010
ISBN: 978-0-8007-333-9
322 pages

Friday, April 2, 2010

A Touch of Scandal by Jennifer Haymore (Book Review)


A Touch of Scandal
by Jennifer Haymore

The last thing Garrett, Duke of Calton, expects to find while tracking his sworn enemy is the delectable, mysterious Kate. This beautiful servant girl rouses a longing the battle-scarred ex-soldier had never hoped to feel again. But when she turns out to be the sister of the man he seeks, he's convinced he's been betrayed.

Kate knows her duty to her family, yet how can she ignore Garrett's powerful pull on her heart? Or the heady temptation of his stolen -- and sizzling -- kisses? Scandal has followed the duke since the war. Now the greatest shock of all is on its way -- the one that can separate Garrett and Kate forever.

My thoughts: In A Hint of Wicked, William Fisk imprisoned Garrett for 7 years after making him lose his memory, and in so doing he lost his wife and family.  In A Touch of Scandal, Garrett is seeking revenge on Fisk.  While looking for him, he meets Kate - only to learn that Kate is William's sister. 

Kate is torn between the man she is falling in love with and with loyalty towards her family.  I am not sure why she feels so loyal to her family though, as they treat her so poorly.  She is actually employed by William and his wife Lady Rebecca, who isn't even aware that she is William's sister! 

I really like the relationship between Kate and Garrett - you know, the kind of relationship where the underdogs might finally come out on top.  I was hoping for them and hurting with them the entire way. 

~I was provided this book for review by Hachette Books.~

A Touch of Scandal
Publisher/Publication Date: Grand Central Publishing, Apr 2010
ISBN: 978-0-446-54027-8
400 pages

An Absence so Great by Jane Kirkpatrick (Book Review)


An Absence So Great
by Jane Kirkpatrick

Did photography replace an absence in her life or expose the truth of her heart's emptiness?

While growing in confidence as a photographer, eighteen-year-old Jessie Ann Gaebele's personal life is at a crossroads. Hoping she's put an unfortunate romantic longing behind her as "water under the bridge," she exiles herself to Milwaukee to operate photographic studios for those owners who have fallen ill with mercury poisoning.

Jessie gains footing in her dream to one day operate her own studio and soon finds herself in other Midwest towns, pursuing her profession. But even a job she loves can't keep painful memories from seeping into her heart when the shadows of a forbidden love threaten to darken the portrait of her life.

My thoughts:  This book was ok, but not really what I expected.  It is a partially fictionalized account of the author's grandmother.  It was interesting in it's portrayal of women in the early 1900's, especially those who wanted to pursue avenues outside of the traditional wife and family, and how they were perceived by society.  At the same time, it just didn't feel like a happy book.  I know, not all books have to be happy - but you must admit that generally it is more fun to read a book that makes you feel happy.

Being the second book in the series, it took me awhile to get caught up in the story line.  Evidently in the first book, A Flickering Light, Jessie was caught up in an inappropriate relationship with her employer, Fred Bauer.  He was 26 years older than her and married.  An Absence So Great picks up the story a few years later, after she has moved to the Milwaukee area.  She is looking to save enough money to open up her own studio and to forget about the indescretions in her past.  Even though she has the opportunity to work at several different studios, she seems unable to shake her relationship with Fred, who seems to not be able to stay away from her.

This book was provided for review by the WaterBrook Multnomah Publishing Group.



An Absence So Great
Publisher/Publication Date: WaterBrook Press, March 2010
ISBN: 978-1-57856-981-6
383 pages







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