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

Sunday, April 18, 2010

It's Monday! What Are You Reading? 4-19-2010



What are you reading on Mondays is 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!

Currently Reading:

This World We Live In (The Last Survivors, Book 3) by Susan Beth Pfeffer - Net Galley

A Certain Wolfish Charm by Lydia Dare - Check sidebar for current giveaway with interview!

Necessary Heartbreak: A Novel of Faith and Forgiveness by Michael J. Sullivan


New this week:

One Million Arrows: Raising Your Children to Change the World - by Julie Ferwerda

Beautiful People - by Wendy Holden

Hannah's List - by Debbie Macomber - There will be a giveaway coming for this one!

Skin and Bones - by D. C. Corso


Current Audio Books:

Twilight (The Twilight Saga, Book 1) - by Stephanie Meyer - We are over halfway through! Yay!

Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter - by Seth Grahame-Smith - I am trying to find someplace/time to listen to a second audio book - but so far not having a lot of luck!

Books finished last week and waiting for reviews:

My Own Personal Soap Opera: Looking for reality in all the wrong places by Libby Malin - Be sure to sign up for the giveaway - (see right sidebar)

Books finished and reviewed last week:


How Clarissa Burden Learned to Fly by Connie Mae Fowler
A Certain "Je Ne Sais Quoi" by Chloe Rhodes


I Has a Hotdog by Professor Happycat


Too Close to Home by Lynette Eason


Forget Me Not by Vicki Hinze


Alexandra, Gone by Anna McPartlin

Older Books Reviewed:


Dear John by Nicholas Sparks (audio version)


Disrupted Grace by Kristin Richburg


Before I Fall by Lauren Oliver

Waiting for Review:

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


READY  - SET - READ!

I have Weiners Winners!

Webfetti.com




Replacement winners for Montana Legacy:
#47 - Edna
#55 - Libby's Library










Winners of Eggs Benedict Arnold -
#51 Edna
#87 Nancye
#3 Lady Graeye
#45 Tabathia










Winners of The Teaberry Strangler:
#17 misskallie2000
#58 Barb
#38 Razlover's Book Blog
#69 Anita Yancey











Winners of A Touch of Scandal
#9 - booklover0226
#20 - misskallie2000
#35 - marian
#43 - nel
#30 Carol L.










And finally - winners of my birthday bash giveaway are:

Winning 5 books - #28 - Marianna
Winning 4 books - #9 - LuAnn
Winning 3 books - #58 - Maria Delgado
Winning 2 books - #146 - ossmcalc
Winning 1 book - #37 - Edna

All winners have been notified and have 48 hours to get me their info or new winners will be chosen!

Thanks and watch for Blogmania coming Apr 30 for the chance to win even more books!

Dear John (audio version) by Nicholas Sparks (Book Review)

Title: Dear John
Author: Nicholas Sparks
Read by: Holter Graham
Publisher: Hachette Audio

About the Book: "Dear John," the letter read. And with those two words, a heart was broken and two lives changed forever.

When Savannah Lynn Curtis comes into his life, John Tyree knows he is ready to turn over a new leaf. An angry rebel, he head enlisted in the army after high school, not knowing what else to do. Then, during a furlough, he meets Savannah, the girl of his dreams.  The attraction is mutual and quickly grows into the kind of love that leaves Savannah vowing to wait for John while he finishes his tour of duty. But neither can foresee that 9/11 is about to change the world.  Like so many proud men and women, John must choose between love and country. Now, when he finally returns to North Carolina, John will discover how love can transofrm us in ways we never could have imagined.

My thoughts:  Again - this is an old one that was finished back in February, so I will do my best to put my thoughts into words.

From the very beginning I was in love with this couple.  It is that I wanted that happy ending in a world full of pain.  Here were two young people who had found each other - and even though they seemed to come from different worlds, together they made sense!  Unfortunately, due to things beyond their control, they were pulled apart -  Some of this because the love they had for each other was so great, that the pain of separation was just as great - and to alleviate that pain, changes happened.  It is another great love story from Nicholas Sparks - and one that captures the voice and the world of this generation.

I saw this movie after I listened to the book - and I am glad I had read the book first.  There were changes made to the story that I didn't agree with - and I really didn't like the actor who played Tim, a friend of Savannah's.  I had a totally different look in my head for this character.  But, I did like the ending of the movie better - so I guess that evened it out!  You must read or listen to this one!

~I received this audiobook for review from Hachette Books.~

Dear John
Publisher/Publication Date: Hachette Audio, Dec 2009
ISBN: 978-1-60024-931-0
8 CD's - 9 hours

Before I Fall by Lauren Oliver (Book Review)


Title: Before I Fall

Author: Lauren Oliver
Publisher: Harper Teen

About the Book: What if you had only one day to live? What would you do? Who would you kiss? And how far would you go to save your own life?
Samantha Kingston has it all: the world's most crush-worthy boyfriend, three amazing best friends, and first pick of everything at Thomas Jefferson High—from the best table in the cafeteria to the choicest parking spot. Friday, February 12, should be just another day in her charmed life.

Instead, it turns out to be her last.

Then she gets a second chance. Seven chances, in fact. Reliving her last day during one miraculous week, she will untangle the mystery surrounding her death—and discover the true value of everything she is in danger of losing.

My Thoughts: If this review comes out jumbled, I apologize - I finished this book way back in February, so while I may not remember all the little details - hopefully I will be able to portray the feelings.

I thought this was a great book, yet very melancholy.  Each time the day ends, and the different way that it ends, Sam always wakes back up on the morning of the 12th.  It was interesting to see how she started to see her decisions affecting those around her in different ways - and at the same time, seeing how some things didn't change no matter how she tried to set up the circumstances.  I was pulling for Sam and Kent and really wanted to see something good happen for them.  It just seemed like Sam was a victim of her circumstances and I wanted her to live once she learned that - but at the same time, it taught me to not sit back and let things "happen" to me, but to take control so that there would be no regrets.

~I received this book for review as part of Barnes and Noble's First Look program.~

Before I Fall
Publisher/Publication Date: Harper Teen, Mar 2010
ISBN: 978-0-06-172680-4
472 pages

Disrupting Grace by Kristen Richburg (Book Review)


Title: Disrupting Grace: A Story of Relinquishment and Healing
Author: Kristen Richburg
Publisher: VMI Publishers

About the Book: Often we hear stories of adoption and happy endings, but what about the adoptions that don't work out? What are families to do when despite all efforts, their child isn't thriving, and the rest of the family is coming apart at the seams? Isolated families are running out of hope, battling pain, experiencing grief and the loss of a dream. Kristen Richburg sadly admits the inability to meet the needs of her adopted daughter and how five years later she relinquished her parental rights of a child she had so hoped to love, nurture and cherish for life. What now?

Disrupting Grace describes Richburg's journey through mothering and relinquishing an adopted child, and how through that experience, her shallow and small understanding of grace was enlarged and forever changed.  It is in heartbreak, that she learned about love, in loss, that she experienced spiritual gain, and in brokenness, that she was made whole.

My thoughts: This was a very sad story that had started out with such hope.  From a mother's perspective, I know how easy it would be to blame myself for a child not thriving who has been placed in my care.  How hard it must have been for the entire family to love this little girl even as she continued to push them away and do everything in her power to undermine their actions.  This says a lot for the grace of God in this family's life.  I can't remember if it was a friend or a therapist that told Kristen this - but it just made me stop and go - Wow  - "The people who failed Emma live in Thailand. You've done nothing but love her and help her to heal."  It made me think back over the entire story and see it in a different light.  After much prayer, Kristen and her family relinquished Emma over to another family who did not have other children.  You could hear the pain in that decision, even though the 5 years they had Emma were so difficult.  They did it in the hopes that Emma would be in a better environment to suit her needs and that she would be able to thrive. 

~I received a copy of this book for review from Bring It On Communications.~

Disrupting Grace
Publisher/Publication Date: VMI Publishers, Feb 2010
ISBN: 978-1-935265-04-7
136 pages

I Has a Hotdog by Professor Happycat (Book Review)

Title: I Has a Hotdog: What Your Dog is Really Thinking
Author: Professor Happycat
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing

About the Book: I HAS A BWAIN!!1!


An you thawt we dint! Now Professor Happycat tells you what's in it and, from I HAS A HOTDOG.com and beyond, lets over 200 LOLdogs loose on the world, all barking the truth about kibble, toys, and bad kitties. This collection of favorites and never-before-seen photos will have you barking for more!


For all you hoomins, a LOLdog is a kay-nine picture with a funny, misspelled caption.
 
My thoughts:  This was a very entertaining book and I had to stop many times to share pictures and captions with my family.  I was barely done with the book when my daughter took it and I haven't seen it since!  This is a book that I think you could look through time and again - as you know that you will find different things funny on different days.  If you don't know what these are all about - visit http://www.ihasahotdog.com/ for some examples!  You'll be hooked.
 
 
I Has a Hotdog
Publisher/Publication Date: Grand Central Publishing, April 20, 2010
ISBN: 978-0446566384
192 pages

In My Mailbox/Mailbox Mondays (April 5 - 17)

Bison roam the Black Hills of South Dakota
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!
Due to the Read-a-thon last week I wasn't able to get a Mailbox post up last weekend - so this post will cover what I received in the last 2 weeks!



by Doug Koktavy

When Doug Koktavy reluctantly brought home two sibling Labrador retriever pups on his wife's urging, he was sure the dogs would create upheaval in his already hectic life. He could not have known the dogs would become cherished family members -- and take him on a wild ride that would change his life forever.

The trouble began when Beezer, at age nine, was diagnosed with kidney disease and given ninety days to live. Doug, by then divorced and self-employed, tried to manage the downward spiral of his beloved pet the way he did everything -- by controlling it. He called vet after vet, searching for hope. He spent hours online, researching treatments. He enlisted animal communicators to help him converse with the Beez.

As Beezer worsened, Doug agonized over what he might have neglected in caring for him. Guilt crept into his life. Thinking about the future without his best friend, he grew frantic with fear. His legal work and his own health began to suffer. 

Yet, it was the caring for Beezer that eventually led to an awakening for this ego-driven attorney. Beezer needed subcutaneous drip treatments, which Doug administered in the evenings. As they snuggled on the couch during those sessions, Doug poured out his soul to him. He also began to listen to his buddy.  Even as Beezer was dying, he was teaching Doug about his life.

The story does not end there. Not long after Beezer passed, the universe had another punch for Doug. Now Boomer was ill. Had Doug learned Beezer's lessons well enough? Could he meet this new challenge with acceptance and peace?
~
Many books deal with the death of a companion animal and subsequent grieving. This groundbreaking memoir on the dying of a pet invites you to share the author's pain and discoveries during that difficult period between diagnosis and the last goodbye.



Still Missing
by Chevy Stevens

On the day she was abducted, Annie O’Sullivan, a thirty-two year old realtor, had three goals—sell a house, forget about a recent argument with her mother, and be on time for dinner with her ever- patient boyfriend. The open house is slow, but when her last visitor pulls up in a van as she's about to leave, Annie thinks it just might be her lucky day after all. Interwoven with the story of the year Annie spent as the captive of psychopath in a remote mountain cabin, which unfolds through sessions with her psychiatrist, is a second narrative recounting events following her escape—her struggle to piece her shattered life back together and the ongoing police investigation into the identity of her captor.



The truth doesn’t always set you free.

Still Missing is that rare debut find--a shocking, visceral, brutal and beautifully crafted debut novel.



by Miralee Ferrell

New job. New townhouse. New car. the perfect new life. . .right?

Jeena Gregory thought she'd made it. She has everything a woman could ask for and a budding career promises more. But when rumors around town cast her boss in a shady light, Jeena starts to question her employer's integrity. Was she wrong to trust this man and this job?

When the boss disappears, salaries go unpaid, and Jeena overhears several hush-hush phone calls, she realizes her carefully crafted world is crumbling. Shaken to the core at the threat of losing everything. Jeena is suddenly confronted with her prejudices -- and with a God she had long forgotten.


by Jamie Buchan
Count the ways. . .

Have you ever stopped to think how many countless ways we use numbers? From the ring of the alarm clock in the morning to the numbers triggering our cell phones, our world is designed with numbers in mind. With Easy as Pi, you'll get the 4-1-1 on the fascinating origin of many of the numbers we use or read about every day:
  • What makes "cloud nine" and "seventh heaven" so blissful?
  • Why is number 7 so lucky and 13 so unlucky?
  • Is "fourth-dimensional thinking" really out of this world?
  • What prompted Ray Bradbury to call his novel Fahrenheit 451?
  • How did 007 become James bond's number?
For the math averse: Be not afraid. Easy as Pi is not a textbook but rather a lively look at the derivation of numerical expressions and their inescapable influence on our culture -- from book titles to bus schedules. To sum it up, easy as Pi equals one clever and often hilarious collection.




by Melanie Dobson

This homecoming wasn't what she expected. . .

Jobless, homeless, and broke, Camden Bristow decides to visit the grandmother she hasn't seen in years. But when Camden arrives in Etherton, Ohio, she discovers that her grandmother has passed away, leaving her the 150-year-old mansion on Crescent Hill.  The site of her happiest summers as a child, the run-down mansion is now her only refuge.

When Camden finds evidence that she may not be the mansion's only occupant, memories of Grandma Rosalie's bedtime stories about secret passageways and runaway slaves fuel her imagination. What really happened at Crescent Hill? Who can she turn to for answers in this town full of strangers? And what motivates the handsome local Alex Yates to offer his help?  As she works to uncover the past and present mysteries harbored in her home, Camden uncovers deep family secrets within the mansion's walls that could change her life -- and the entire town -- forever.





Seduced by the Wolf
by Terry Spear


She'll do anything to help wolves. . .


Biologist Cassie Roux has dedicated her life to protecting wolves in the wild. On a despearate mission to help a she-wolf with newborn pups, the last thing Cassie needs right now is a nosy and entirely too attractive werewolf pack leader trying to track her down. . .


His first priority is to protect his pack. . .


Werewolf pack leader Leidolf Wildhaven has just taken over a demoralized pack. With rogue wolves on the loose causing havoc and the authorities from the zoo suddenly zeroing in on the local wolf population, the last thing he needs in his territory is a do-gooder female, no matter how beautiful and enticing she is. . .



by Carolyn Brown

He lives the good life. . .

Gorgeous and rich, Travis Henry travels the country unearthing oil wells and then moving on. Then the beautiful blue-eyed new owner of the Honky Tonk beer joint becomes his best friend and so much more. When his job is done in Texas, how is he ever going to hit the road without her?

She's finally found a place that feels like home. . .

When Cathy O'Dell buys the Honky Tonk, the nights of cowboys and country tunes come together to create the home she's always wanted. Then in walks a ruggedly handsome oil man who tempts her to trade in the happiness she's found at the Honky Tonk for a life on the road with him. . .

Will a sexy showdown persuade two stubborn lovers to reveal their true hearts' desires, or will they both be left singing the blues?


by Patrick Somerville

Early one summer morning, Matthew Bishop kisses his pregnant wife and sets out in search of the antique cradle that used to be hers. Although the cradle has been missing for many years, she is determined that Matt find it before the arrival of their first child.

A decade later, Renee Owen, a successful writer of children's books, prepares for her only son's deployment to Iraq, and his departure brings to the surface memories of a lost love, an old truth, and a long-hidden life.

This widely acclaimed novel radiates with wry wisdom as it takes the reader on a surprising journey into the heart of marriage, parenthood, and what it means to be a family.




by Pam Grier

Some may know her as hot, gutsy, gun-totin' Foxy Brown, Friday Foster, Coffy and Jackie Brown. Others may know her from her role as Kit Porter on The L Word. But that only defines one part of the legend that is Pam Grier.

FOXY is Pam's testimony of her life, past and present. In it, she reveals her relationships with Richard Pryor, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, and Freddie Prinze Sr., among others.  She unveils her experiences as a backup singer and a blaxploitation star. In particularly candid and shocking chapters, she shares -- for the first time -- her view of those films and the persecution that blacks, especially women, needed to endure to make a name for themselves. . . including how it felt to be labeled one of the most beautiful women alive, yet not be permitted to try on clothes in a department store because of the color of her skin. And in words sure to inspire many, she tells the story of her ongoing battle with cancer.

From her disappointments to her triumphs, nothing is held back.  with FOXY, Pam wishes to impart life lessons to her readers -- and hopes to touch their hearts.



by Sheena Iyengar
Read by Orlagh Cassidy

Life is full of choices. How do we make them?

An Apple Store customer asks for the latest iPhone in black but suddenly changes his preference to white when he sees the choices others are making. A resident of a former communist country is offered a fizzy drink from a wide selection but picks at random. Though the child knows she shouldn't press the big red button, she finds her hand inching forward. A young man and woman decide to marry -- knowing that the first time they meet will be on their wedding day.

How did these people make their choices? How do any of us make ours? Choice is a powerful tool to define ourselves and mold our lives -- but what do we know about the wants, motivations, biases, and influences that aid or hinder our endeavors?

In THE ART OF CHOOSING, Columbia University professor Sheena Iyengar, a leading expert on choice, sets herself the Herculean task of helping us become better choosers. She asks fascinating questions: Is the desire for choice innate or created by culture? Why do we sometimes choose against our best interests? How much control do we really have over what we choose? Ultimately, she offers unexpected and profound answers, drawn from her award-winning, discipline-spanning research.

Here you'll learn about the complex relationship between choice and freedom, and why one doesn't always go with the other. You'll see that too much choice can overwhelm us, leading to unpleasant experiences. Perhaps most important, you'll discover how our choices -- both mundane and momentous -- are shaped by many different forces, visible and invisible.






by Christopher Farnsworth

The Ultimate Secret. The Ultimate Agent.
The President's Vampire.

Incredibly clever and compulsively readable, Blood Oath is a debut political thriller packed with enough action to out-Bourne Jason Bourne and out-Bauer Jack Bauer.

Zack Barrows is an ambitious young White House staffer whose career takes an unexpected turn when he's partnered with Nathaniel Cade, a secret agent sworn to protect the president. But Cade is no ordinary civil servant. Bound 140 years ago by a special blood oath, Nathaniel Cade is a vampire. He battles nightmares before they can break into the daylight world of the American dream, enemies far stranger -- and far more dangerous -- than civilians have ever imagined.

Blood Oath is the first in a series of novels featuring Nathaniel Cade, the president's vampire.





by M.J. Rose

An FBI agent, tormented by a death he wasn't able to prevent, a crime he's never been able to solve and a love he's never forgotten, discovers that his true conflict resides not in his past, but in a . . . past life.

Haunted by a twenty-year-old murder of a beautiful young painter, Lucian Glass keeps his demons at bay through his fascinating work as a special agent with the FBI's Art Crime Team.  Currently investigating a crazed art collector who has begun destroying prized masterworks, Glass is thrust into a bizarre hostage negotiation that takes him undercover at the Phoenix Foundation -- dedicated to the science of past life study -- where, in order to maintain his cover, he agrees to submit to the treatment of a hypnotists.

Under hypnosis, Glass travels from ancient Greece to nineteenth-century Persia, while the case takes him from New York to Paris and the movie capital of the world. These journeys will change his very understanding of reality, lead him to question his own sanity and land him at the center of perhaps the most audacious art heist in history -- the theft of a 1,500-year-old sculpture from the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

International bestselling author M.J. Rose's The Hypnotist is her most mesmerizing novel yet. An adventure, a love story, a clash of cultures, a spiritual quest, it is above all a thrilling capstone to her unique Reincarnationist novels, The Reincarnationist and The Memorist.



by Debbie Macomber

My darling Michael, I know this letter will come as a shock to you. . .

On the anniversary of his beloved wife's death, Dr. Michael Everett receives a letter Hannah had written him.

In it she reminds him of her love and makes one final request. An impossible request -- I want you to marry again. She tells him he shouldn't spend the years he has left grieving her. And to that end she's chosen three women she asks him to consider.

First on Hannah's list is her cousin, Winter Adams, a trained chef who owns a cafe on Seattle's Blossom Street. The second is Leanne Lancaster, Hannah's oncology nurse. Michael knows them both. But the third name is one he's not familiar with -- Macy Roth.

Each of these three women has her own heartache, her own private grief. More than a year earlier, Winter broke off her relationship with another chef.  Leanne is divorced from a man who defrauded the hospital for which she works. And Macy lacks family of her own, the family she craves, but she's a resucer of strays, human and animal.  Macy is energetic, artistic, eccentric -- and couldn't be more different from Michael.

During the months that follow, he spends time with Winter, Leanne and Macy, learning more about each of them --- and about himself.  Learning what Hannah already knew.  He's a man who needs the completeness only love can offer. And Hannah's list leads him to the woman who can help him find it.


What great things did you find in your mailbox this week?

Friday, April 16, 2010

Too Close to Home by Lynette Eason (Book Review)




Title: Too Close to Home
Author: Lynette Eason
Publisher: Revell

About the book: The FBI has a secret weapon. But now the secret's out.

When missing teens begin turning up dead in a small Southern town, the FBI sends in Special Agent Samantha Cash to help crack the case. her methods are invisible, and she never quits until the case is closed.

Homicide detective Connor Wolfe has his hands full.  His relationship with his headstrong daughter is in a tailspin, and the string of unsolved murders has the town demanding answers.  Connor is running out of ideas -- and time. 

Samantha joins Connor in a race against the clock to save the next victim.  And the killer starts to get personal.

Too Close to Home ratchets up the suspense with each page even as love blossoms in the face of danger. Read this one with the lights on!


Available April 2010 at your favorite bookseller from Revell, a division of Baker Publishing Group.


My thoughts:  This one gets off to a quick start with the discovery of a victim in a trash dumpster.  From there it only gets better.  I found this one hard to put down and carried it with me just about everywhere I went.  This book has everything from the hardships of being a single father to a teenage girl (it is hard enought to just parent teenage girls!) - and then having this same father on the search for a serial killer who seems to be targeting teenage girls!  There is a little romance - lots of mystery and suspense.  You should read this one if you are a fan of suspense - and if you are not - read it anyway - it just might hook you!  What's even better is that this is the first in a new series - Women of Justice (this would be a good name for a TV series don't you agree?)  Don't Look Back is coming in October!

~I received this book for review from Baker Publishing.~

Too Close to Home
Publisher/Publication Date: Revell, Apr 2010
ISBN: 978-0-8007-3369-8
332 pages

A Certain "Je Ne Sais Quoi" by Chloe Rhodes (Book Review)




Title: A Certain "Je Ne Sais Quoi": The Origin of Foreign Words Used in English
Author: Chloe Rhodes
Publisher: Reader's Digest

Rather than give you a synopsis of the book - I thought I would share this article that the author wrote that was passed along to me for possible publication.

A Certain "Je Ne Sais Quoi"
By Chloe Rhodes,
Author of A Certain "Je Ne Sais Quoi": The Origin of Foreign Words Used in English

Picture this scenario: You're having a tête-à-tête with an old friend from your alma mater, who is a wine aficionado. So you pick an al fresco table at a chic little café, and order from the a la carte menu. However, your companion won't stop exchanging double entendres with the woman in the sarong at the next table. So you're stuck listening to the klutz of a waiter droning on ad nauseam about the soup du jour. At that point, you're ready to say hasta la vista -- but you don't want to seem like a diva.

Try to say all that in "English." You probably wouldn't change a single word. How else would you describe such a scene if it weren't for the thousands of foreign words and phrases we've snuck into our conversations over the years? We all use them without a second thought. But how much do you really know about the origins of the borrowed words and phrases you use every day?

Did you know, for example, that when you place an order for apple pie a la mode, that you are using a phrase that dates back to the days of King Louis XIV? His court became such a standard of good taste that the British aristocracy wanted to do more than dress in French fashion; they wanted to use their phrase for it, too. In the seventeenth century the term was anglicized to become alamode -- a light silk used to make scarves. And at some point in small-town America, the combined flavors of cooked apple, sweet pastry, and cool, creamy vanilla represented the very latest in fashionable, cutting-edge gastronomy, giving the term its modern meaning of "with ice cream."

And there's hundreds of other examples from France: laissez faire, joie de vivre, fait accompli, faux pas, I could go on but you'd only become blasé. And with good reason; English speakers have been word collectors since the fifth century, when the dialects of Anglo-Saxon settlers, Celts, and Norse invaders were cobbled together to create Old English. When the Norman conquerors arrived in 1066 it must have seemed natural to steal some of their vocabulary, too. By the end of the thirteenth century, more than 10,000 French words were absorbed into English -- and we still use 75 percent of them today.

But we've done more than add a French lilt to our lingo. Those Normans also introduced us to Latin. In medicine, we have words like post-mortem and placebo, while in legal language, Latin phrases such as in camera and quid pro quo are still bounced around the courtroom. And others have crossed over into broader use; an agreement or contract signed in good faith is said to be bona fide. However, in everyday use, the phrase has become interchangeable with the word genuine and usually describes someone or something whose authenticity can be trusted.

More foreign phrases joined the fray during the marauding, seafaring days of our English-speaking ancestors, who filled their boats with strange Asian spices, exotic fabrics, and loads of new words for all the animals, garments and foods they had discovered.

Even ketchup, that favorite sidekick of French fries, is an import, starting life as a spicy pickled fish sauce in seventeenth-century China. The word is a Westernized version of the Malay word kichap, which came from koechiap, meaning fish brine. The sweet red version we love with began to take shape when American sailors added tomatoes, which are excellent for preventing scurvy. In 1876 John Heinz launched his infamous tomato ketchup and the rest, as they say, is history.

And there are stowaway words in your wardrobe as well as your pantry; your pajamas, dungarees, and even your bandanna have their origins on foreign shores. Bandanna comes from the Sanskrit word bandhana, meaning to tie, from the tie-dying technique used to decorate scarves and handkerchiefs in India. The anglicized "bandanna" was incorporated into the English language during the days of the British Raj, though they're now more popular with wrestlers and cowboys who want to give their look a certain panache.

And while the Brits went abroad to gather additions for their dictionary, in seventeenth-century North America, words were coming to the English language by the boatload. Soon words from Italy, Poland, German, and Eastern Europe were leaping off immigrant ships and landing in the American English lexicon. To uncover the backstory on some of these, from alter ego to zeitgeist, explore the pages of A Certain Je Ne Sais Quoi -- The Origin of Foreign Words Used in English by Chloe Rhodes, published by Reader's Digest, and voilá! Soon you'll easily be able to schmooze with everyone at the next cocktail party without making a single faux pas.



My thoughts: This was a fun book to read.  I admit that I usually don't give a second thought as to where the origins of words come from  - even if it is obvious they aren't of English origin.  It was interesting to learn where they originated - and I learned what some meant that I had encountered in my reading, but was just too lazy 
not somewhere that I could look up the meaning.  The only thing that I wish the book would have included would be the correct pronunciations of the words.  If you have a love for words, or even a curiousity, you should check out this book!

A Certain "Je Ne Sais Quoi"
Publisher/Publication Date: Reader's Digest, Mar 2010
ISBN: 978-1606520574
176 pages



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