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

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Spring's Serenity Read-a-thon (April 25 - May 1)


I decided to sign up for this week long read-a-thon since I will be reading anyway. Hoping this will encourage me to maybe read a little more than usual - Or, if I have to choose between Spring Cleaning and Spring Reading, it will let me choose Spring Reading without too much guilt. 

The Spring's Serenity Read-a-thon is being hosted by Michelle at The True Book Addict. It is going to run from 12:00am Monday, April 25 through 11:59pm Sunday, May 1. There is going to be a few prizes and a couple of mini-challenges throughout the week.  So, since you are all going to be reading anyway - come out and join the week long read-a-thon!  My challenge to myself is to read a book a day next week.  Visit the sign-up post at The True Book Addict for more details.

Friday, April 22, 2011

The Friday 56 (April 22, 2011)




This is a fun meme to do hosted by Freda's Voice. If you'd like to join in the fun go to The Friday 56.


 Rules:
  • Grab a book, any book.
  • Turn to page 56.
  • Find any sentence that grabs you.
  • Post it.
  • Link it here.





 "You will trip over in your haste if you are not careful, woman.  Your mouth discharges words like diarrhea." (The Secret Lives of Baba Segi's Wives, p56)










The Secret Lives of Baba Segi's Wives: A Novel
Publisher/Publication Date: William Morrow, June 29, 2010
ISBN: 978-0-06-194637-0
280 pages

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Home-Ec 101 by Heather Solos (Book Review)

Title: Home-Ec 101: Skills for Everyday Living
Author: Heather Solos
Publisher: Betterway Home

Home-Ec 101 by author and One2One Network Member Heather Solos shares tips and tricks for tackling the everyday challenges we find in the home.



Heather's advice is easy to apply and is written with the same witty style and attitude readers love on her blog, Home-Ec101.com. Charts, tips, sidebars and "Dear Home Ec 101" letters cover offer the tools you need to keep your home clean and in good repair.

The perfect manual for college grads to the more seasoned homemakers, this book has something to offer everyone. From the simplest how to's (ever meet a 20 year old who can't pre-heat an oven?) to how to be a fabulous host at your housewarming party, Heather's advice is relevant for homeowners and apartment dwellers of any age.


My thoughts: Let's start with the cover - who doesn't like this cover. Even though I wasn't alive in the 50's, it makes me think of an easier time, when family and home were really the center of life.  But past that, this book really would be a wonderful gift for anyone.  From the new high school or college grad getting ready to move out of the house, to the newlywed who has to start living with a spouse, or to the new parents who have the added responsibility of a baby. 

I don't fall into any of these categories and still found much in this book that I could use.  Growing up, I had 2 older sisters who did much of the cooking and cleaning.  By the time I was a teenager it was just my parents and myself and before I graduated high school my father had passed away so it was just me and my mom.  There isn't a lot of cooking and cleaning needed with just two people.  Many of the skills that I needed to run a home I had to learn after I moved out on my own.  They were learned because of necessity. 

I knew that I was going to like this book when she started out in the introduction stating "Going out is fine when it's a choice rather than an avoidance factor."  This cracked me up as I sat looking at the toys strewn so densely on the living room floor that you have to tiptoe to get through it!  She also clarifies the differences between cleaning, organizing and sanitizing.  My daughters have a hard time understanding that organizing is not cleaning!  (Yes - they are getting a copy of this book!)

As far as the cleaning goes, it is the largest section in the book.  It starts with the basics as to what the differences in cleaning supplies are to actually breaking down the chores by day, month, season - always with a sense of humor and without making you feel like a "dummy."  From there, laundry is tackled with a nice section on what to use to treat common stains.  It also gives you some quick fixes to minor garmet repairs.  And I would be remiss if I didn't add that the letters she includes from readers of her blog are hilarious! 

The last two sections cover minor home repair and cooking.  I generally leave the home repair to my spouse, but am going to keep this section handy so if (when) he gives up on something, I can come in an amaze him with my knowledge .  The cooking section I truly love.  Even after being away from my mom's house for 25 years, I still feel like a novice in the kitchen.  Now that my kids are of an age that they need to start learning, there are times I feel like I am learning right along with them.  She approaches the cooking like she has the other sections.  She breaks it down to the basics, talking about different basic things everyone should have in the kitchen, to explaining the difference between slicing and dicing and common cooking terms.   She even tells you what you should always have on hand in your pantry, and I can say mine looked pretty good!  By the way, did you know that you can tell whether your baking powder is still good by adding 1 t. to 1/2 C. of water?  If it is still active, it will bubble - otherwise, it is time to replace it.  This is the kind of neat tips that you get from Home-Ec 101. 

If you can't tell by my raving above, I really enjoyed reading this book and am going to enjoy sharing it with my daughters and their friends!

~I received a complimentary copy of this book from One 2 One Network in exchange for my review.~


Home-Ec 101: Skills for Everyday Living - Cook it, Clean it, Fix it, Wash it
Publisher/Publication Date: Betterway Home, Apr 1, 2011
ISBN: 978-1440308536

240 pages

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

First Wild Card Tour: That's When I Talk to God by Dan & Ali Morrow (Book Review)

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!




My thoughts:  This is a great kid's book.  It makes talking to God "real"  and doesn't portray an adult talking to God, but a child.  It goes throughout her day and as things happen to her, she realizes all the great times that would be times that she can thank God, or apologize, or just share things with Him.  It also has very colorful illustrations that I think a child would enjoy. 
Today's Wild Card authors are:

Dan and Ali Morrow

and Illustrated by

Cory Godbey


and the book:

David C. Cook (April 1, 2011)
***Special thanks to Audra Jennings, Senior Media Specialist, The B&B Media Group for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHORS:


Dan and Ali Morrow are parents of two wonderful daughters. When they’re not writing children’s books, they like to go on adventures around their Colorado home. They are the authors of That’s Where God Is (2010), their first children’s release.

Visit the authors' website.


ABOUT THE ILLUSTRATOR:


Cory Godbey illustrates, animates, and writes for Portland Studios, a creative firm dedicated to telling great stories and pursuing excellence in art.

He has contributed to projects such as Zune Arts, Flight graphic novel anthologies, and has worked with many major publishers.

Recently, Cory was accepted in the acclaimed Society of Illustrators Annual.

Cory seeks to tell stories with his work.

He also likes drawing monsters.

Visit the illustrator'swebsite.


SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:

Targeted to children four to eight, That’s When I Talk to God mirrors the day of the typical child, creating an opportunity for readers to put the practices in the story to use in their own lives. Through beautiful illustrations and an engaging, familiar character, readers can relate to That’s When I Talk to God. Children will learn to go to God with their fears, their joys, their questions, and their desires. They will also learn the hows, whens, and whys of praying to the Lord in a way they can easily apply to their own experiences. And adults will be reminded to communicate the benefit, simplicity, and beauty of prayer.



Product Details:

List Price: $12.99
Reading level: Ages 4-8
Hardcover: 36 pages
Publisher: David C. Cook (April 1, 2011)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1434700186
ISBN-13: 978-1434700186

AND NOW...THE FIRST FEW PAGES (Click on the pictures to enlarge them!):







Monday, April 18, 2011

It's Monday! What Are You Reading? (April 18, 2011)





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:  
Flavors by Emily Sue Harvey

Next Up:
The Silenced: A Novel by Brett Battles
Demons Are a Girl's Best Friend by Linda Wisdom
Reading Lips: A Memoir of Kisses by Claudia Sternback


E-Book:
Sudden Moves: A Young Adult Mystery by Kelli Sue Landon

Next E-Books up:
The Witches Lottery (Enchanted Island Series) by Krystal McLaughlin
Life From Scratch by Melissa Ford
Deadly Errors by Allen Wyler


Bathroom Book:
Surrender the Dark by L.A. Banks


Audio Book
One for the Money (Stephanie Plum, No. 1) by Janet Evanovich

Reviewed Last Week:
The Deepest Waters by Dan Walsh
So Close the Hand of Death by J.T. Ellison
Texas Blue by Jodi Thomas


Waiting for Reviews:
Wither (The Chemical Garden Trilogy)by Lauren DeStefano

Children's Books waiting for Review: (I really need to get these reviewed!)
Little Star by Anthony DeStefano
Pearl's Wisdom by Auntie LuLu
Bug Meets His Friend (Bug's Adventure Series) by K.M. Groshek
Good Night, Little Sea Otter by Janet Halfmann

GIVEAWAYS:
Battlefield of the Mind by Joyce Meyer - ends May 7
Texas Blue by Jodi Thomas - ends May 7
In Zanesville by Jo Ann Beard - ends April 28
Song of the Silk Road by Mingmei Yip - ends April 27

Upcoming giveaways:
Secret Daughter by Shilpi Somaya Gowda
The Girl in the Green Raincoat by Laura Lippman
Redeemer by Jeffrey S. Williams
Daddy's Little Squirrel by Kayla Shurley Davidson

READY - SET - READ!

Sunday, April 17, 2011

UFO's

Okay, here is my once in awhile post about needlepoint, that makes this blog Books and Needlepoint.  I belong to the Lake County Chapter of the American Needlepoint Guild.  Every year, for those who want to participate, we bring in three "unfinished objects" of needlepoint - or UFO's.  The group then votes on which one we should try to have done by the following year. 

Below are the pictures of what each individual will be working on this year.  There are a couple of pictures missing, as I am hoping to take those tomorrow night and add them to this post.  My goal is to update everybody on the progress throughout the year, and hopefully shame myself into working on my own!  (lol)

Oh - we are penalized if we don't finish and have to pay a monetary fee into the kitty.  There is a prize drawing for anyone who does finish. . . though there hasn't been a lot of competition for this in the past! 

I will start with my own - it is a piece called Solar Flare designed by Ro Pace.  I took her class a couple of years ago, and love the piece, but can honestly say I haven't worked on it since. 


Solar Flare - KH

I don't have a lot of details for the other pieces, so I will just show the pictures and the stitcher's initials.  I am not sure how the other guild members would feel about their names being posted.


House - LD


Mystery in a Corner - TH



Patterns of the Orient - CMcE
She also has another one she is working on for a pilot class for seminar next year - I didn't know if I could show the picture in "public" or not so if I can I will add it!


Purse - VF


Tlaquepaque #1 - JR


I don't know what this one is called - CS


I will add pictures of the following items as I get them:


Through the Garden Gate - BJ



?? - DC


Patterns of the Orient and/or Trick or Treat Kids - JH


Happy Stitching!

Mailbox Monday (April 18, 2011)



 Mailbox Monday's host for April is Amy at Passages to the Past. In My Mailbox is hosted Sundays at The Story Siren. Please visit these posts and take a look at what packages everybody else got this week! 



I'd Know You Anywhere
by Laura Lippman

In the summer of 1985, when she was fifteen, Eliza Benedict was kidnapped by Walter Bowman and held hostage for almost six weeks.  He had killed at least one girl and Eliza always suspected he had other victims as well.  In the intervening years Eliza compartmentalized that part of her past and now leads a quiet, ordinary suburban life with her successful husband and two children.

But Eliza's tranquility is shattered when she receives a letter from Walter:  There was your photo, in a magazine.  Of course, you are older now.  Still, I'd know you anywhere.

On death row in Virginia, Walter seems to be making a heartfelt act of contrition as his execution nears.  Yet as he presses her from more and deeper contact, it becomes clear that he is after something more.  He wants Eliza to remember what really happened that long-ago summer.  He wants her to save his life.

An edgy, utterly gripping tale of psychological manipulation that explores the lasting effects of crime on a victim's life, I'd Know You Anywhere is a virtuoso performance from the acclaimed, award-winning author.





The Kitchen Daughter
by Jael McHenry

A mouth-watering debut novel about self-discovery and shortbread. . . and a magical talent, both bitter and sweet.

After the unexpected death of her parents, shy and sheltered Ginny Selvaggio, a young woman with Asperger's syndrome, seeks comfort in the kitchen, away from her well-meaning but interfering relatives and her domineering sister, Amanda.  The methodical chopping, slicing, and stirring soothe her anxiety, and the rich aroma of ribollita, painstakingly recreated from her Italian grandmother's handwritten recipe, calms her senses.  But it also draws an unexpected visitor:  the ghost of Nonna herself, bearing a cryptic warning in rough English, "Do no let her," before vanishing like steam from a cooling dish.

Faced with grief and uncertainty, Ginny turns to her recipe collection, and in doing so, discovers that she has the power to call forth the ghost of any dead person whose dish she prepares.  It's a gift she is certain she cannot share with her pragmatic sister but that ultimately leads her to an unexpected friendship and the possibility of a new life.

The mystery deepens when Ginny finds a letter hidden behind a loose fireplace brick and a series of strange black and white photographs -- evidence of a family secret she can't untangle alone.  As Amanda pushes her to sell the only home she's ever known, Ginny decides that the key to her future lies within this provocative riddle from her parents' past.  But can she cook up a dish that will bring them back long enough to help her solve it?

For readers of Sarah Addison Allen's Garden Spells and Jodi Picoult's House Rules, Jael McHenry's thoughtful debut is a delicious, insightful story that considers the question:  What does it really mean to be normal?




Come and Find Me
by Hallie Ephron

Computer security expert and reformed hacker Diana Highsmith has not ventured beyond her home for more than a year -- not since that fateful climbing vacation in Switzerland took Daniel's life.  Haunted by the sound of Daniel's cries echoing across the gorge as he fell, Diana cannot stop thinking about the life they'll never have -- grief that has transformed her into a recluse.

Diana doesn't have to shut herself off completely from the world, though; she and Daniel's best friend run a thriving Internet security company.  From her home, in her pajamas, Diana assesses security breaches, both potential and real, and offers clients a way to protect themselves from hackers -- the kind of disruptions Diana herself used to create.  Once Diana has a game plan she is able to meet with clients in OtherWorld, an Internet-based platform, using Nadia, an avatar she created for herself.  Diana knows she'll have to rejoin the "real world" eventually, but right now a few steps from her door each morning is all she can handle.

When Diana's sister goes missing, however, she is forced to do the impossible:  brave both the outside world and her own personal demons to find her sister.  As one step outside leads to another, Diana soon discovers that she is following a trail fraught with danger -- and uncovering a web of deceit and betrayal, both online and real-life, that threatens not only her sister's life, but her own.




Dead by Midnight
by Carolyn Hart

Solving puzzles comes naturally to Annie Darling, cheerful owner of the Death on Demand mystery bookstore on the lovely sea island of Broward's Rock.  Annie is aided and abetted by her admiring husband, Max, who runs an unusual business that offers help to people in trouble.

A recent death appears to be suicide, but Annie suspects murder.  To solve the case, she unravels the mystery of a towel hidden at midnight in a gazebo, the lack of fingerprints on a crystal mug, blood on a teenager's blue shirt, and the secret of a lovers' tryst.

Annie believes she has set the perfect trap for a merciless killer until her cell phone rings and Death whispers in her ear.




In Zanesville
by Jo Ann Beard

The beguiling fourteen-year-old narrator of In Zanesville is a late bloomer.  Even in her small midwestern city, where modesty is prized and self-assertion is a faux pas, she flies under the radar -- a sidekick, a third wheel, a marching band dropout, a disastrous babysitter, the kind of girl whose eureka moment is the discovery that "fudge" can't be said with an English accent.

Luckily, she has a best friend, a similarly undiscovered girl with whom she shares the everyday adventures -- sometimes harrowing, sometimes embarrassing -- of a 1970s American girlhood, incidents through which a world is revealed and character is forged.

In time, their friendship is tested -- by their families' claims on them, by a clique of popular girls who stumble upon them as if they were found objects, and by the first startling, subversive intimations of womanhood.

With dry, irrepressible wit and piercing observations, Jo Ann Beard shows us that in the seemingly quiet streets of America's innumerable Zanesvilles is a world of wonders, and that within the souls of the awkward and the overlooked often burns something radiant.




The Unbelievable Adventures of a WWII German War Bride
by Ingeborg M. Johnston

Unbelievable Adventures of a WWII German War Bride by Ingeborg M. Johnston is a gripping, heroic, and at times humorous memoir of one girl's survival in war-torn Berlin and the extraordinary life she created for herself and her family in post-war America.  From nursing wounded German officers to making fools of Russian soldiers, to talking her way through situations that would have resulted in prison for many, Johnston's courage and chutzpah will leave you wide-eyed with amazement.  How could one young woman break all the rules, take on Germany's top industrial leaders. . . and win?  How does one young woman marry an American and make a life in a country that was recently the enemy. . . and immediately become an important part of her new community?  This is the story of hope and dreams, of courage and risk-taking, of falling in love and following her heart, a bigger-than-life story that cannot be missed.


What books came home to you last week?

Friday, April 15, 2011

Texas Blue by Jodi Thomas - Book Review and Giveaway!

Title: Texas Blue
Author: Jodi Thomas
Publisher: Berkley

Gambling man Lewton Paterson wants to marry into a respectable family, even if it costs him his friendship with Duncan McMurray. After fleecing a train ticket from one of the three gentlemen picked to call on Duncan's cousins, Lewt makes his way to Whispering Mountain. But seducing a well-bred woman is harder than Lewt thought, and he realizes that to entice a McMurray sister, he'll need to learn a thing or two about ranching -- and love.



Emily McMurray has no intention of ever getting married, so she convinces a friend to take her place when the suitors arrive, leaving her free to run the ranch as usual. But when Lewt insists that Em teach him about ranching, she finds herself struggling to keep up both her disquise and the walls around her heart. Because the more time Em spends with Lewt, the more she desires the man she's determined to escape. . .


My thoughts: I liked the premise of this story - of two people who are trying to escape who they are - one to find love and one to avoid love. Neither one of them were pretending to be someone else for shady purposes.  I thought it was a nice switch up to have the man be the one looking for love and a family though, and the woman wanting to avoid it.

Even though Lewt was a gambler, and they were looked down upon by "respectable" people, he was an honest gambler and never left anyone completely broke without an out. He genuinely cared about people.  He would probably say he was determined, but other people might see him as just stubborn. 

The only people Emily was really close to were her family.  She even kept the ranch hands at arm's length and didn't realize the extent that they watched over her.  She had a secret in her past that caused her to mistrust men.  Working every day with Lewt on the ranch though, she first had respect for him, and then realized she was beginning to trust him.

You could really feel the passion between the two of them.  I love that the author was able to convey this passion without turning the scenes x-rated. To me, it makes the love portrayed seem more pure somehow. 

This is book 5 in the Whispering Mountain series, but it reads very well as a stand-alone.  The books in order are:
1. Texas Rain (Whispering Mts)
2. Texas Princess (Whispering Mts)
3. Tall, Dark, and Texan (Whispering Mountain)
4. The Lone Texan
5. Texas Blue

~I received a complimentary copy of Texas Blue from the author in exchange for my review.~


Jodi Thomas gave me a second book to giveaway to one of you!  This giveaway is open to U.S. only and will end at midnight CST, May 7, 2011.

Mandatory Entry: Just leave a comment with your email address.

Additional Entries: Follow my blog - just tell me how you do it - (up to 2 ways, good for 2 entries)
Twitter - leave me the link
Blog post - leave me the link

A total of five entries are available - please leave each entry in a separate comment

Winners of all giveaways on Books and Needlepoint are chosen using Random.org.


Texas Blue
Publisher/Publication Date: Berkley, April 2011
ISBN: 978-0425240472
336 pages



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