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

Thursday, August 26, 2010

John Belushi is Dead by Kathy Charles (Book Review)

Title: John Belushi is Dead
Author: Kathy Charles
Publisher: MTV

My synopsis/thoughts: Hilda and Benji had become friends under creepy circumstances.  One morning before school, they had witnessed a cat getting hit by a car; and after flopping around for awhile - finally dying.  A teacher scooped it up into a trash bag and threw it in the trash bin.  Benji stood there and cried, something Hilda would not let herself do, but she did try to comfort him.  Hilda approached him a couple of days later so they could rescue this dead cat and return him to his owner.  This simple act bonded them together.

A couple of years later they are still friends and planning a summer filled with visits to all the spots in L.A. where someone died - either by suicide or murder.  I am not sure where Benji's fascination with this grisly hobby came from, but Hilda's parents were decapitated in a car accident in which she survived.  She feels as if she cheated death and so feels it is always around her.  She lives with her Aunt Lynnette.  The fact that Jayne Mansfield died the same way makes her feel a little better about death - that it even happens to the rich and famous (and in the same way).

One of their excursions takes them to the apartment of Hank - a cranky old man who likes to watch old movies and drink beer. It was rumored that a silent screen star had killed himself in the bathroom (of Hank's apartment) when the industry switched over to talking films.  They asked Hank if they could come in to take pictures.  He grudgingly agreed (a little cash did exchange hands).

Benji wanted to go immediately, but Hilda sensed that the old man was lonely and wanted to stay.  With Benji being her ride though, she had to leave.  A couple of days later, Hank tracks her down via a business card that Benji had left with him.  He invited Hilda over and told her he had something he thought she would be interested in.  This was the beginning of a friendship that was bigger than age.  After Hank has an accident and ends up in the hospital, Hilda meets Hank's downstairs neighbor Jake.  A young screenwriter who at first, seems to rub Hilda the wrong way.  As Hank and Hilda's friendship grows, and Jake and Hilda's friendship starts, Hilda and Benji seem to be falling apart. 

Hilda feels that Benji is really starting to get strange and she is a little fearful of him.  He doesn't seem content to just visit the sights of deceased stars anymore, but feels he needs to push it just a little further.

Even though this book was not a big action book, I did enjoy it.  You see how Hilda finally comes into her own person and you get a glimpse of the healing that is finally starting to happen after the death of her parents.  This book talked about a lot of different stars that were killed and it has made me really curious as to read some of their stories.  I think I am going to go looking for some of the books mentioned in John Belushi is Dead - like Hollywood Babylon.  I didn't know who was more needy in the Hilda/Benji relationship in the beginning - but it was interesting to see how these two characters evolved as they each made other friends.  This book gave me a different look at L.A. - underneath the glittery lights to the underbelly.  I would probably be someone who would try to search out the sights were people died if I lived there. 

~I received a copy of this book from Pocket Books in exchange for my review. ~

John Belushi is Dead
Publisher/Publication Date: MTV, Aug 24, 2010
ISBN: 978-1439187593
309 pages

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Waiting on Wednesday: You Don't Look Like Anyone I Know

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



You Don't Look Like Anyone I Know
by Heather Sellers
Publisher/Publication Date: Riverhead, Oct 14, 2010

An unusual and uncommonly moving family memoir, with a twist that give new meaning to hindsight, insight, and forgiveness.

Heather Sellers is face-blind-that is, she has prosopagnosia, a rare neurological condition that prevents her from reliably recognizing people's faces. Growing up, unaware of the reason for her perpetual confusion and anxiety, she took what cues she could from speech, hairstyle, and gait. But she sometimes kissed a stranger, thinking he was her boyfriend, or failed to recognize even her own father and mother. She feared she must be crazy.

Yet it was her mother who nailed windows shut and covered them with blankets, made her daughter walk on her knees to spare the carpeting, had her practice secret words to use in the likely event of abduction. Her father went on weeklong "fishing trips" (aka benders), took in drifters, wore panty hose and bras under his regular clothes. Heather clung to a barely coherent story of a "normal" childhood in order to survive the one she had.

That fairy tale unraveled two decades later when Heather took the man she would marry home to meet her parents and began to discover the truth about her family and about herself. As she came at last to trust her own perceptions, she learned the gift of perspective: that embracing the past as it is allows us to let it go. And she illuminated a deeper truth-that even in the most flawed circumstances, love may be seen and felt.

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

What are you waiting for?







Holly's Inbox: Scandal in the City by Holly Denham (Book Review)

Title: Holly's Inbox: Scandal in the City
Author: Holly Denham
Publisher: Sourcebooks Casablanca


My synopsis: We catch up with Holly as she is still working as a receptionist at DK Huerst bank.  She is now living with Toby as well as a rabbit that she is keeping a secret from him.  She shares receptionist responsibilites with Trish, Claire, Marie and her friend Aisha.  The bank is aware of her talents though, and are soon grooming her to become the manager of her department.  She has about a month to improve their ratings in order to keep her management job. 

Again, we learn everything about Holly's life, as well as the lives of her friends and family, through her inbox - with an occassional glimpse into some of her friends' inboxes. 

Toby travels alot,  (he works for DK Huerst also) so Holly is feeling a little down.  She is feeling neglected and doesn't like sitting at home alone - so she ends up going out with friends a little too much and partying a little too heavy when Toby isn't around.  A wedge seems to be coming between them and she doesn't know how to fix it.  She keeps dropping hints about the promotion, hoping that Toby will pick up on it and tell her how proud he is of her.  As things progress though, she becomes convinced that he is having an affair, or at the very least, that he is not in love with her anymore.

Then there is Tanya - she is the head of the catering department and is very manipulative!  Every chance she gets she makes Holly look bad and is also making a play for Toby.  I don't know how I would have kept my mouth shut around her - she was even pushing my buttons! 

My thoughts:  This book was as much fun to read as the first one - Holly's Inbox (review). There is a surprise at the end that I did not see coming but it was perfect - actually brought tears to my eyes, which I would not have expected from this book.  I guarantee that this is a quick read and that you will be laughing, yelling (at Tanya!), talking to the characters and smiling by the end. 

~I received a copy of this book from Sourcebooks in exchange for my review.~

Publisher/Publication Date: Sourcebooks, Aug 17, 2010
ISBN: 978-1-4022-4114-7
535 pages

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

How to Sue a Telemarketer - Guest blogger Steve Ostrow

What do you do when a telemarketer calls you?  Before the Do Not Call Registry was made, we used to give the phone to one of our daughters (under the age of 7) and they would keep rambling until the telemarketer would hang up.  Or we would answer the phone and lay it down next to the TV.  What is amazing to me is how many times the same telemarketer will call you in one day if you don't answer the phone! 

Well, please help me in welcoming Steve Ostrow to Books and Needlepoint today.  He is the author of How to Sue a Telemarketer.

HOW TO SUE A TELEMARKETER IN SMALL CLAIMS COURT

Congress has spoken! Anti-telemarketing legislation has been passed. Under reasonable restrictions, certain tactics by telemarketers are prohibited and court actionable. Violations can be enforced by the State via the attorney general’s office, the public via class action lawsuits or private lawsuits, and individuals via the small claims court.

The Telephone Consumer Protection Act of 1991 (TCPA) started the ball rolling. Congress was torn between the special interest lobbyists and the people’s vote. The green cash of the lobbyists stalled the legislature for numerous years, but eventually the annoyance of the telemarketing industry became too much. The door opened and the unfettered invasion of free speech was outweighed by the consumer’s right to privacy. After strong objection and outrage by consumers groups, the common sense legislation protecting the privacy of one’s own home was long overdue.

The 1991 original law was pretty weak and without sharp teeth. A free bite at the apple was given and the first offense by a telemarketer to a residence was forgiven with only a simple apology. A second offense was required in order to make an unsolicited commercial call actionable. Basically business did not change under the original law. In 2003, over great objection from the special interest groups, came the National Do Not Call Registry. Yes, 2003 was a great year for the peace and quiet in a consumer’s home. Instead of a consumer requesting individual companies from not calling the home telephone soliciting their service, a residential consumer could sign up at one location and prohibit almost all telemarketers from calling the home phone number. The burden shifted to the telemarketing companies to check “the registry” rather than having the consumer contact the merchant and opt out. Penalties were instituted which are collectible by attorney generals, lawyers, and individuals through the small claims process.

Under the TCPA and the Do Not Call Registry, there are several different violations which are collectible. The most popular ones are:

1. Calling a residential telephone number that is on the National Do Not Call Registry;
2. Using a pre-recorded dialing device to initiate a commercial sale;
3. Using a blocked telephone number when initiating a commercial sale;
4. Soliciting a consumer before 8am or after 9pm;
5. Failure to provide a copy of the company’s Do Not Call Manual after demand for a copy;
Each violation is actionable separately, or can be “stacked” together when multiple infractions are incurred. Even though the courts are supposed to punish each violation with a $500 penalty, different judges will approach cases differently. Some judges will allow you to “stack” as many violations into one case as possible. Others may limit you to one, two, or three causes of action. Regardless of the amount of the judgment, you are able to prosecute the invasion of your peace and privacy in your home through the small claim courts.

Penalties under the TCPA may be “trebled” when the court finds that the violation is intentional. It can be tedious to understand when a telemarketing violation is intentional and when it is not. Rationally thinking, all solicitations by telemarketers are intentional; they are intentionally picking up the phone at their boiler rooms and randomly telephoning as many people as possible making their commercial pitch. It is not accidental that your number may be called, just random bad luck. I guess the easiest way to understand the intentional tripling of damages is using the playoff basketball foul analogy. Some fouls are hard basketball fouls, some are flagrant one fouls, and others flagrant two. Sometimes you just shoot free throws, other times you get ejected from the game. Sometimes the court awards you $500; sometimes the atrocious call telephone solicitation can be awarded $1,500. It’s all up to the ref.
If you are a Democrat and you get a telephone solicitation from a Republican candidate, slow down before you start licking your lips about bringing the opposing political party to its knees. Under the TCPA, certain types of speech are exempted from lawsuits under the Act. Always remember, the violations under the TCPA were balanced with the First Amendment Right of Freedom of Speech. Certain solicitation exceptions are specifically carved out:


1. Tax exempt non-profit organizations, including political parties and campaigns;
2. Organizations with which you’ve had a prior business relationship;
3. Organizations with which you’ve given prior written permission and not expressly revoked;
4. Calls which are NOT COMMERCIAL.
Convenience is a big part of our lives. All of us would like to nail these pesky telemarketers; sometimes it is easier just to hang up the telephone. However, if you are in the mood to make some cash and fight back against these commercial parasites, the good news about small claims court litigation is that it can prosecuted in our home backyard. Since the violation occurred at our telephone, the proper jurisdiction for the action would be our local court.



Steve Ostrow is an attorney, celebrity impersonator and the author of the new book How To Sue A Telemarketer: A Manual for Restoring Peace On Earth One Phone Call At A Time. To date, Steve has successfully sued, or settled, won and collected, over 10 judgments against telemarketers. To find out more and order his book, go to www.howtosueatelemarketer.com.


About the book: Telemarketers have been a pain in the general public’s behind for decades. Thanks to their interrupting us day and night, the telephone has been transformed from a convenience, into a source of annoyance and frustration.
How To Sue A Telemarketer: A Manual For Restoring Peace On Earth One Phone Call At A Time is a tongue-in-cheek manual that shows the average citizen how they can fight back against a telemarketer by taking them to small-claims court. Half humorous and half How to, How to Sue a Telemarketer combines comedy with savvy information about the legal system and step-by-step instructions on how consumers can sue telemarketers.

“I wrote How To Sue A Telemarketer for all the good, kind and ordinary people of the world who simply want to have a quiet dinner, or a beer and watch a basketball game, without getting interrupted by someone who doesn’t give a damn about them,” says Steve Ostrow, the books author and an attorney for over 30 years.

In addition to his work as an attorney, Steve has been seen on the Tonight Show, Jimmy Kimmel and The Ellen DeGeneres Show as a celebrity impersonator for the television character Kramer, of the famed Seinfeld television show. Just visualize Cosmo Kramer going to law school. How would he defend the public’s right to have some peace and quiet in their homes? This book is it. How To Sue A Telemarketer will comically take the reader through the process of:

• What to do when a telemarketer first calls

• Gathering information to file a civil complaint

• Filing and serving of the complaint

• What to do in court all the way through collection on the judgment

• Everything you need to know about suing telemarketers

Join us on the How To Sue A Telemarkter virtual tour. To learn more about the tour, visit http://bookpromotionservices.com/2010/07/05/how-to-sue-a-telemarketer/. You can also learn more about How to Sue a Telemarketer at http://howtosueatelemarketer.com/









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First Wild Card Tour: The Berenstain Bears and a Job Well Done by Jan and Mike Berenstain

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 authors are:


and the book:

Zonderkidz (April 9, 2010)
***Special thanks to Krista Ocier of Zondervan for sending me a review copy.***


ABOUT THE AUTHORS:



Stan and Jan Berenstain introduced the first Berenstain Bear books in 1962. Mike Berenstain grew up watching his parents work together to write about and draw these lovable bears. Eventually he started drawing and writing about them too. Mike is married to Andrea, and they have three children. They live in Pennsylvania, in an area that looks a lot like Bear Country.


Visit the authors' website.

Product Details:

List Price: $3.99
Reading level: Ages 4-8
Paperback: 32 pages
Publisher: Zonderkidz (April 9, 2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0310712548
ISBN-13: 978-0310712541

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


Kid's Korner: The Berenstain Bears and a Job Well Done (Book Review)

Title: The Berenstain Bears and a Job Well Done
Authors: Jan and Mike Berenstain
Publisher: Zonderkidz

My thoughts: It is spring time and time for spring cleaning.  The whole family has chores to do, but what happens when Brother, Sister, and Honey discover spiders where they are supposed to clean?  A good lesson about what the Bible says about the joy of work.  Also teaches how everyone in the family has chores to do before they can play.

About the authors: Stan and Jan Berenstain introduced the first Berenstain Bear books in 1962.  Mike Berenstain grew up watching his parents work together to write about and draw these lovable bears. Eventually he started drawing and writing about them too.  Mike is married to Andrea, and they have three children.  They live in Pennsylvania, in an area that looks a lot like Bear Country. (back cover)

~I received a copy of this book from Krista Ocier of Zondervan in exchange for my review~



The Berenstain Bears and a Job Well Done
Publisher/Publication Date: Zonderkidz, April 2010
ISBN: 978-0-310-71254-1
Ages 4-7
32 pages
















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Monday, August 23, 2010

It's Monday! What Are You Reading? (8/23/10)



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!

School starts this week for my youngest! I don't know whether to be happy or sad! We go to his meet and greet with his Kindergarten teacher later today.  He frowned at me yesterday and said he didn't think he started school until next year.  He is a very social guy though and I know he will have a lot of fun.

Currently Reading:
Hell, Yeah by Carolyn Brown - Second book in the Honky Tonk series, should be a quick read.
Seduced by a Wolf by Terry Spear - I love this series! - It should also be done very quickly.
Amish Proverbs by Suzanne Woods Fisher
The Women in Jesus' Life by Mindy Ferguson
The Hanging Tree by Bryan Gruley - haven't read any in this for awhile, but hope to get back to it soon!
Roseflower Creek by Jackie Lee Miles - promising start - Hope to get back to it soon!

Bathroom Book:

Audio Book:
The Scarecrow by Michael Connelly - Husband and I actually got a little more of this listened to over the weekend.


New this week:
John Belushi is Dead by Kathy Charles
Emma and the Vampires by Wayne Josephson
She's Gone Country by Jane Porter

 
 
Waiting to Be Reviewed:
Holly's Inbox: Scandal in the City by Holly Denham
101 Things I Learned in Fashion School by Matthew Frederick and Alfredo Cabrero
Heart of My Heart by Kristin Armstrong
Meet Me in Dreamland: A Lu-Chu and Lena Book by Steven McKinney, Valerie McKinney
Masked by Lou Anders


Ready - Set - Read!

Sunday, August 22, 2010

I Love This Bar by Carolyn Brown (Book Review)

Title: I Love This Bar (Book 1 in the Honky Tonk series)
Author: Carolyn Brown
Publisher: Sourcebooks Casablanca

My synopsis/thoughts: Daisy O'Dell is the owner and bartender at the Honky Tonky.  She had shown up 7 years earlier when her car had broken down next door. She had left Arkansas after her boyfriend had hit her for the last time.  She had run him off with a shotgun and packed up and left.  Ruby, the original owner of the Honky Tonk, had taken her in and given her a job and let her live in the apartment behind the bar. When Ruby died in a motorcycle crash, she left the bar to Daisy. 

Ruby knew how to run a bar and Daisy did not mess with that.  Jukebox, dance floor, pool tables and beer was enough to keep it turning a profit. Ruby also told her no men in the apartment - kept you from making spur of the moment mistakes!

Jared McElroy had moved to town from Oklahoma to help out at his Uncle Emmet's ranch.  His uncle had let things slide since his wife, Mavis, had died. Well, Jared and Daisy fell for each other immediately - and I mean fell for each other.  See, as they were walking across the bar, they each hit a puddle of beer and got tangled up in each other and hit the floor. All it took was for their eyes to meet for the sparks to fly.

Jared couldn't get it out of his head that she was a barmaid - this was not a good profession in his eyes (or his family's), and even though she was also a vet tech, it didn't negate the first profession.  Daisy had sworn off men after her last debacle years before with her abusive boyfriend.  These two continue to be drawn to one another like moths to a flame.

There are some other colorful characters in here - including Jared's Uncle Emmet.  He was a riot!  Then there was Chigger and Jim Bob.  When Daisy first met Chigger she thought she was a prostitute - and even though Chigger likes a good role in the hay - she has a good heart and is very loyal.  Jim Bob is her boyfriend and one of a set of triplets - Jim Bob, Joe Bob and Billy Bob, who used to run around with Jared as boys, when he would come to visit Emmet and Mavis.

This book was pretty predictable, but sometimes you need one of those.  I liked all the references to country songs, as I went through a country phase back a few years.  It made me want to go dig up and dust off all those CD's!  This is the first book in the Honky Tonk series.  Next up is Hell, Yeah and I will be reviewing it in the next few days.

~I received a copy of this book from Sourcebooks in exchange for my review.~

I Love This Bar
Publisher/Publication Date: Sourcebooks Casablanca, June 2010
ISBN: 978-1-4022-3926-7
366 pages














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Mailbox Madness (Aug 16 - 22)

Bison roam the Black Hills of South Dakota

In My Mailbox is hosted Sundays at The Story Siren.  Mailbox Monday's host for August is Chick Loves Lit. Please visit these posts and take a look at what packages everybody else got this week!



(Surrender to Destiny: Book 1)
by MaryLu Tyndall

On the brink of the War of 1812, Marianne Denton must marry to unlock her inheritance. Without the money, her mother can't receive medical care and her sister will be destitute.  But Noah Brenin needs to sail his cargo to England before the war commences in order to prove his worth to his father and make enough money so he won't have to marry at all.

When Noah walks out on their engagement party. Marianne chases him down and ends up on his merchantman out at sea. The situation worsens when Noah's ship encounters a British man-of-war and the couple is impressed into the British navy.

While a young lad's prophecy of destiny looms over them both, Marianne and Noah are forced to face their darkest fears as they desperately try to escape and fulfill their destinies -- destinies that could change the course of the war and history forever.



by Bruce MacHart

On a moonless Texas night in 1895, an ambitious young landowner suffers the loss of "the only woman he s ever been fond of" when his wife dies during childbirth with the couple's fourth boy, Karel. From an early age Karel proves so talented on horseback that his father enlists him to ride in acreage-staked horseraces against his neighbors. But Karel is forever haunted by thoughts of the mother he never knew, by the bloodshot blame in his father's eyes, and permanently marked by the yoke he and his brothers are forced to wear to plow the family fields. Confident only in the saddle, Karel is certain that the horse "wants the whip the same way he wants his pop's strap . . . the closest he ever gets to his father's touch." In the winter of 1910, Karel rides in the ultimate high-stakes race against a powerful Spanish patriarch and his alluring daughters. Hanging in the balance are his father's fortune, his brother's futures, and his own fate. Fourteen years later, with the stake of the race still driven hard between him and his brothers, Karel is finally forced to dress the wounds of his past and to salvage the tattered fabric of his family.




Reminiscent of Kent Haruf's portrayals of hope amidst human heartbreak and Cormac McCarthy's finely hewn evocations of the American Southwest, Bruce Machart's striking debut is as well wrought as it is riveting. It compels us to consider the inescapable connections between sons and their mothers, between landscape and family, and between remembrance and redemption.




(Lake Manawa Summers Series)
by Lorna Seilstad
Sun, summer, and a scrumptious sailing instructor. What more could a girl want?



When spunky Marguerite Westing discovers that her family will spend the summer of 1895 at Lake Manawa, Iowa, she couldn't be more thrilled. It's the perfect way to escape her agonizingly boring suitor, Roger Gordon. It's also where she stumbles upon two new loves: sailing, and sailing instructor Trip Andrews.

But this summer of fun turns to turmoil as her father's secrets threaten to ruin the family forever. Will free-spirited Marguerite marry Roger to save her father's name and fortune? Or will she follow her heart--even if it means hurting the family she loves?

Full of sharp wit and blossoming romance, Making Waves will whisk you away to a breezy lakeside summer holiday.




(A Scrapbooking Mystery)
by Laura Childs
It's Halloween in New Orleans-and the festivities are going to be killer.



With the help of her best friend Ava, Carmela Bertrand is building a giant monster puppet for the Halloween Monsters & Mayhem parade. Things get terrifying earlier than expected when they overhear an argument between Jekyl Hardy and Brett Fowler- and just minutes later they find Fowler's dead body.

Carmela has known Jekyl for years and can't believe he'd ever resort to murder, despite the fact that Fowler owed him money. But when another victim is discovered-who also had an unfriendly relationship with Jekyl-Carmela is convinced someone is framing her friend and now must find a way to unmask the real killer.






(Lizzie Searches for Love, Book 1)
by Linda Byler
Lizzie Glick longs to fit into her quiet Amish community. Her sisters, Emma and Mandy, are ready to get married and settle into the traditional rhythm of having children and keeping house. But Lizzie isn't sure that's what she wants for her future.  It isn't that Lizzie doesn't want to stay Amish. It's just that there's so much to figure out!

Stephen, her quiet, gentle friend, hints that he might be interested in a relationship deeper than friendship, but Lizzie is also drawn to the charming Amos who seems to have eyes for everyone but her.

She has certainly attracted the attention of the egg-truck driver. A thrill runs through her every time the worldly man comes to pick up an order, each time extending his stay a little longer. How long will she keep this a secret from Emma -- and Mam and Datt?

What will become of Lizzzie? She has too hot a temper. She hates housework and dislikes babies. She loves driving fast horses but is petrified of going away from home for a week to work as a maud (maid). Is she too spirited, too innocent, and almost too uninhibited for a young Amish woman?



by David Rakoff

In this deeply funny (and, no kidding, wise and poignant) book, Rakoff examines the realities of our sunny, gosh­ everyone-can-be-a-star contemporary culture and finds that, pretty much as a universal rule, the best is not yet to come, adversity will triumph, justice will not be served, and your dreams won’t come true.




The book ranges from the personal to the universal, combining stories from Rakoff’s reporting and accounts of his own experi­ences: the moment when being a tiny child no longer meant adults found him charming but instead meant other children found him a fun target; the perfect late evening in Manhattan when he was young and the city seemed to brim with such pos­sibility that the street shimmered in the moonlight—as he drew closer he realized the streets actually flickered with rats in a feeding frenzy. He also weaves in his usual brand Oscar Wilde–worthy cultural criticism (the tragedy of Hollywood’s Walk of Fame, for instance).


Whether he’s lacerating the musical Rent for its cutesy depic­tion of AIDS or dealing with personal tragedy, his sharp obser­vations and humorist’s flair for the absurd will have you positively reveling in the power of negativity.



by Nevada Barr
(From Paperback Swap)

With 13 1/2, Nevada Barr, New York Times bestselling author of the award-winning Anna Pigeon novels, has written a taut and terrifying psychological thriller. It carries the reader from the horrifying 1970s murder spree of a child -- dubbed "Butcher Boy" by a shocked public -- in Rochester, Minnesota, to Polly, the abused daughter of Mississippi "trailer trash," to post-Katrina New Orleans.

In Jackson Square in the French Quarter a tarot card reader told Polly Deschamps she would be a success. Thirty years later, Polly is a respected professor of literature with good friends and her own home -- a safe life for her and her two daughters.


Butcher Boy, released on his seventeenth birthday, shook the snow from his boots and headed south.  New Orleans, a Mecca for runaways then and now, offers sanctuary but never forgiveness.


When Polly falls in love with Marshall Marchand, a restoration architect who is helping to rebuild her adopted city, shadows of the past rise out of the poisoned ground of New Orleans as thick and deadly as the toxic waters of the flood.

Like history, some crimes are doomed to repeat themselves. Evil stays the same, only the victims' names change. As two broken pasts collide in an uncertain present, Polly is determined that her children's names will never be on that list.



by April Henry

Sixteen-year-old Cheyenne Wilder is sleeping in the back of the car while her stepmom fills her prescription. Before Cheyenne realizes what's happening, someone is stealing the car -- with her inside! Griffin hadn't meant to kidnap Cheyenne; all he planned to do was take the car. But once Griffin's dad finds out that Cheyenne's father is the president of a powerful corporation, everything changes -- now there's a reason to keep her. How will Cheyenne survive this nightmare? She's not only sick - she's BLIND!





by Conor Grennan

In search of adventure, twenty-nine-year-old Conor Grennan traded his day job for a year-long trip around the globe, a journey that began with a three-month stint volunteering at the Little Princes Children's Home orphanage in war-torn Nepal. But what began as a lark became a passionate commitment that would transform the young American and the lives of countless others.

Within minutes of his arrival, Conor was surrounded by a horde of gleeful boys and girls showering him with warm welcomes. Yet, as he soon learned, the children's cheery smiles belied years of pain and abuse; many of the boys and girls at the Little Princes Children's Home were not orphans at all but victims rescued from human traffickers. Moved by their plight, Conor vowed that when his trip was over he would return to the children of the Little Princes Children's Home and eventually reunite them with their families -- a promise he would risk his life to keep.

Little Princes is the powerful story of a soul's awakening, and a reflection of the noblest and darkest of human intent. It is a true, and often hilarious, tale of the power of optimism, love, and faith. And it is an unforgettable account of children, families, and one man whose decision to take a stand makes the world a better place for all of us.




by Lane Smith

As Lane explains, “Not to say that I'm not excited by the new technologies and reading devices introduced (it seems) nearly every month, I am. But I'm sure on some level I'll always be a traditional book guy.” And aren't we all? New York Times bestselling author and illustrator Lane Smith delivers a book to the technorati and literati alike. Juxtaposing a book-loving ape and a tech-savvy donkey, with clever illustrations and a brilliant punch line, Smith's nod to the times will be a collector's item on shelves, and will be read again and again in bookstores, libraries for years to come.






El Patron
by Michele Scott
(Contest win from the author)

What began as an innocent love affair for one young woman, Marta Peña, in Costa Careyes, Mexico in 1969, sets in motion a series of events that spans the next thirty years. This is the story of South American drug lords Antonio Espinoza and Javier Rodriguez, and their violent quest for power. In a sweeping family saga, we meet the women who love them and the children they vow to protect at any cost. With a complex web of interconnected families, this gritty novel delves into the lives of a power hungry clan, following the rise of their business, the destructive path of their torrid and erotic love affairs, and the struggle to balance intense greed with devout family loyalty. Strong women face tragedies that test their will and their commitment to the men they passionately desire. As young girls grow into women, their traumatic pasts will drive their actions and force them to make gut-wrenching decisions. With murder, drug trafficking, dirty politics, illegal gambling, prostitution, obsessive love affairs, and family strife, El Patrón is a whirlwind in the vein of Mario Puzo's The Godfather.



What great reads did you get this week?

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