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

Monday, October 24, 2011

Cloudburst by V.C. Andrews (Giveaway!)


Cloudburst
by V.C. Andrews


Second in an all-new series! (But can be read as a stand alone)
Cloudburst, from the creator of Flowers in the Attic by V.C. Andrews®
Fate swept Sasha Porter into the lap of luxury, and into a torrent of bitter lies and shocking betrayals—all revealed in the riveting new novel CLOUDBURST (Pocket Star Books; October 25, 2011; $7.99) from bestselling author V.C. Andrews®.
Since being taken in by wealthy Mrs. Jordan March and living in her exquisite home like a daughter, Sasha Porter’s traumatic past—destitute on the streets, and the shattering accident that killed her mother—seems like a fading nightmare. Beautiful and sophisticated, as bold and daring as her “sister,” Kiera March, Sasha still keeps her mother’s wise words close to her heart: never fully trust anyone. Inside her privileged new world, it’s advice that will prove more precious than gold.
Against the wishes of Jordan’s husband, Donald, Sasha attracts the attention of Ryder Garfield, a shy, handsome athlete, and maneuvers her way into his heart. But Ryder’s hidden torment soon explodes in a horrific tragedy that pulls Sasha into a flood of guilt and despair. And when someone she thought she could trust targets her vulnerability, Sasha recalls her mother’s warnings—and a violent storm of dark deceptions and shocking family secrets is unleashed. Will she sink or swim?

I have one copy of Cloudburst to giveaway courtesy of Pocket Books!  Giveaway is open to US/Canada and will end on Nov 7, 2011 at midnight CST.  Following is appreciated, but not required.


A Dog's Way Home by Bobbie Pyron (Book Review w/bonus giveaway!)

Title: A Dog's Way Home
Author: Bobbie Pyron
Publisher: Katherine Tegen Books


About the Book: One late fall afternoon, a tragic highway accident leaves eleven-year-old Abby and her beloved Shetland sheepdog, Tam, stranded at opposite ends of the Blue Ridge Parkway. Though each is determined to be reunited with the other, the days separating them turn to weeks, then months, and dangers and changes fill up Abby's and Tam's lives. Will they ever find their way back home to one another?


Classic in its themes and contemporary in its telling, Bobbie Pyron's A Dog's Way Home is the unforgettable tale of the many miles, months, and mountains that separate two loyal friends—but that can't possibly keep them apart.

My thoughts:  This was a very quick middle-grade level read.  If you like animal stories - especially dogs - then this will be one that you want to add to your shelf.  The author tells the story from two perspectives - that of Tam, the sheltie in the story, and Abby - the little girl who owns Tam.  

After a car accident leaves Tam lost and alone in the Smoky Mountains, he spends months trying to get back to Abby.  After awhile he is more wild than dog, but something in him keeps pulling him home.  Abby's family, meanwhile, has moved to Nashville as her dad has gotten a recording contract.  Abby doesn't want to leave the home that she is sure that Tam is trying to get back to, but doesn't have a choice.  She has dreams about Tam and what he is going through, and her friends are convinced that she has inherited "the sight" from her grandmother. 

I found myself cheering for Tam to keep going in this book.  When something would happen to him, I would keep my fingers crossed that he would be able to pull himself through. 

I remember some of my teachers in elementary school reading to us after lunch - do they still do that?  I think this would be a good choice for a book like that.  If you have a child in your life that likes dog/animal stories - definitely introduce her to this book. 

~I received a complimentary copy of this book from Teddy at Premier Virtual Author Book Tours and the author, Bobbie Pyron.~

Publisher/Publication Date: Katherine Tegen Books, Feb 2011
ISBN: 978-0061986741
Ages 9-12

I have one copy of The Ring, by Bobbie Pyron for giveaway -



Plagued by slipping grades and a budding criminal record, at 15, Mardie's heading down a path of self-destruction she can't seem to avoid. Unlike her perfect older brother Michael, who does everything right according to their father, Mardie can't measure up. But when she discovers a girls' boxing club at the gym, Mardie's drawn in by the fighters' fearlessness and strength. Having already lost her parents' trust, and shunned by her boyfriend and friends, the ring is the only place left where no one judges Mardie. Angry and hurt, Mardie can't wait to start throwing punches. But Kitty, her wise and patient trainer, a former boxer who's coached her share of troubled girls, shows Mardie that boxing isn't just about fighting--it's also about strategy and mental discipline--the things that make a fighter into a winner. Mardie begins to apply the lessons she's learned in the ring to her own battles, especially at home, where she finds she's not the only one struggling for acceptance. As she trains for her upcoming championship bouts, Mardie hopes to make her parents proud. Filled with exciting sports action, The Ring is the inspiring story of a girl learning to believe in herself.


Sunday, October 23, 2011

Readathon Wrap Up

So, even though this is like the 4th or 5th time I have done this readathon, my husband comes in at lunch today and says - don't you need to go read?  If I would have been thinking clearly, I would have said Yep and disappeared for the rest of the afternoon!  But I told the truth and let him know it was only a 24 hour readathon. 

So now for the wrap up

1. Which hour was most daunting for you?  This would have been hour 18 - the one where I gave up and went to bed!

2. Could you list a few high-interest books that you think could keep a Reader engaged for next year?  No - I wouldn't attempt anything too meaty that takes too much concentration!

3. Do you have any suggestions for how to improve the Read-a-thon next year? You guys did a great job this year!  

4. What do you think worked really well in this year’s Read-a-thon?  I liked the meme's where you just had the Mr. Linky.  I had done some of the challenges, and then when I went back to read other comments, couldn't find the one that I thought I had left for the challenge (Of course, this could be operator error. . .)

5. How many books did you read?  I only read 1 1/2 - which was good with my eye!

6. What were the names of the books you read? A Dog's Way Home and most of The Comforts of Home.  It's funny because A Dog's Way Home was set in Harmony Gap, North Carolina and The Comforts of Home is in Harmony, Texas.

7. Which book did you enjoy most?  The Comforts of Home

8. Which did you enjoy least?  Well, that would leave the other one, A Dog's Way Home, which was very good as well!

9. If you were a Cheerleader, do you have any advice for next year’s Cheerleaders?  No advice, I think they do a great job!

10. How likely are you to participate in the Read-a-thon again? What role would you be likely to take next time?  I will definitely participate.  I would like to take a role next time, as either a cheerleader or a challenge meme host maybe.

Readathon Over and Out - Hour 18

Since coming back from The Night of the Living Dead (which was a lot of fun to go see on the big screen!)  I have barely been able to read 40 pages.  My eyes are so heavy and my right eye is sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo dry that it actually hurts to close it.  I think I have abused it enough for today.  I am going to bed and will do a recap in the morning!  Night all!

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Hour 11 Book Trailer Challenge

Well this will be my last post for awhile as we are going to see Night of the Living Dead!  So I thought I would post a creepy book trailer of a book that I just recently discovered and want to read!




Keep reading and I will check in when we get back!

Book Sentence Challenge and Readathon Update

The Book Sentence Challenge is the one I have the most fun with during every readathon.  I have composed 6 sentences using book titles - see all my pics below.  Sorry if some of the pictures aren't very clear - I could only find the camera where I could not control the flash!

Minding Ben Until Tuesday The Soldier's Wife Left Neglected The Christmas Shoppe.





All I Want Is You, Pale Demon, Dead By Midnight






Very Bad Men Across the Universe, Kick The Queen of Last Hopes





The Year We Left Home, Three Warm Bodies Going Cowboy Crazy Dare To Take Charge



When the Brook Dries Up Push The Ring Across Many Mountains



The Upright Piano Player Born Under a Lucky Moon Never Knowing the Final Note



Which one is your favorite?


Update - Have only read about 100 pages in to my next book.  I discovered that my facebook page for Books and Needlepoint hadn't updated since September, so I got engrossed trying to figure out why!  I am hoping that I got it fixed. 

Hour 6 update and Mini Challenge

Well, I finished A Dog's Way Home - cute middle-grade book about a lost dog.  Made me cry - a little.  But I told my daughter it was just my dry eye watering - lol.  Started The Comforts of Home by Jodi Thomas.  

Foods so far - Donut w/sprinkles, snack bag of pretzels, 1/2 peanut butter and green olive sandwich (don't knock it til you try it!) and some Harvest Cheddar Sun Chips that just came in the mail from Frito Lay!  (Thanks Frito Lay!)   I have also drank 2 cups of coffee and a mountain dew.  That might explain the jittery fingers!

I think I have done every mini challenge so far - yay!   So here is the next one -

What are the Top 5 books that I am looking forward to reading in the next few months -

So - in no particular order - Here are 5 books off my TBR list that I would like to get to sooner rather than later!



Happy reading!

Mini Challenge - Book Puzzle

For this challenge, I had to create a Book Puzzle. Essentially, this is a series of pictures, graphics, or photos that you put together that will describe a book title.

Can you guess it?







I will let you know the correct answer later today!  

Character Photo Mini Challenge

The challenge  is to take a photo of something that represents a character in one of the books you are reading for the readathon.

I have two books on my list today - Ghost Trackers and Ghost Files - so I snapped this picture of a ghost that my son made at a party last night!

Readathon Morning Hours and Introduction Meme



Good morning readers!  Just checking in.  Got a little bit of a late start.  Stayed up later with my daughter last night as she thought she might be having contractions!   But, it was false labor so I am here reading with you all today! 

I am going to try to finish up A Dog's Way Home by Bobbie Pyron first.  I am about half way through it and it is an easy read (bigger print) book so should be okay on my eyes!

Introduction Meme
1)Where are you reading from today?
 North of Chicago near the Wisconsin border.

2)Three random facts about me…
I am going to be a grandma anyday now.
I am a library aide at my son's elementary school.
I keep chocolate hidden in the house for emergencies!

3)How many books do you have in your TBR pile for the next 24 hours?
I have a stockpile of 18 books so that I can always have something that interests me!  Here is my list.

4)Do you have any goals for the read-a-thon (i.e. number of books, number of pages, number of hours, or number of comments on blogs)?
I have no goals - just to read as much as I can.  I am going to try to keep track better of how much I read though.

5)If you’re a veteran read-a-thoner, any advice for people doing this for the first time?
This is not my first time, and everytime I want I see something that I want to do better - but most of all - just relax and enjoy yourself!.

Friday, October 21, 2011

Knit with Love by Lisa Bogart (Book Review)

Title: Knit with Love: Stories to Warm a Knitter's Heart
Author: Lisa Bogart Publisher: Revell
About the book:  The rhythm of knitting brings peace and joy to life.  Knitters love to share stories, skills and even their stashes of elegant yarn.  And they love finding new outlets for their talents.

Knitting can't feed the hungry, fight crime, or stop global warming, but a hand-knit sweater warms a cold child.  A cozy scar eases a homeless night.  A tiny hat comforts a new baby's head.  A lovely prayer shawl wraps a worried patient in peace.

Through inspiring stories and gentle encouragement, Knit with Love, reveals the many ways you can, with your own two hands, bring joy and comfort to those around you.

My thoughts:  This was a nice easy read for me this week.  It is filled with stories of how others use their knitting to bring themselves peace, or try to add a little peace to the world around them.  It is also great for inspiration and encouragement.

Of course, I also found it frustrating this week, as I just purchased some yarn to make blocks with my soon-to-be granddaughter's name on them (project picked out by my daughter) and then have to limit things I do with my eyes!  I am definitely not one of those knitters who don't have to look at their work.  I wanted to make her a blanket, but she is already getting one from MY mom, so she wanted me to do something different.  She set off for Hobby Lobby tonight and I told her to look for some more yarn for a blanket anyway.  So as you can see, this book is urging me to knit! 

Really though, what I think I liked best about it were all the stories, both big and small, in which people used their knitting to reach out to others.  It gave me tons of ideas for places to look where I might be able to help out, even in a little way. And the ton of websites that are listed is wonderful!  I think I especially like the woman who said to take a little time to think about the end recipient.  Don't send crazy hats to people in a war zone where they might become targets - or teddy bears to children in Africa, but maybe a different kind of animal toy.  And the idea of praying for the recipient as you stitch it is pretty neat too.

If you know a knitter, or are a knitter, I think you would enjoy taking a look at this book.  If you are a wannabe knitter, this just might be the thing to push you over the ledge!   Take a chance!


Available October 2011 at your favorite bookseller from Revell, a division of Baker Publishing Group.

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


Knit with Love: Stories to Warm a Knitter's Heart
Publisher/Publication Date: Revell, Oct 2011
ISBN: 978-0-8007-1970-8
171 pages

Dewey's 24 Hour Read-a-thon!


I almost missed it!  Dewey's 24 Hour Read-a-thon starts tomorrow  morning at 7AM CST and I almost missed it!(If you don't know what it is - go here to find out.)  I am going to read as much as I can, but with my dry eye I may find myself limited.  I will be reading more physical books than ebooks as my eye tends to dry more with the ebooks.  (This is from the Bell's Palsy that I developed earlier this week.)  I will be taking a break tomorrow night to go see a showing of the original Night of the Living Dead in a theater with my DH.



Possible books that I will be reading:



Or if I want to try reading on my Kindle or Nook, these are some of my choices:



We will just have to see how my eye holds out - but I am going to try to write up one review tonight and get to bed.  Night all!

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Winners!

I have a couple of winners to announce! 

Dawn M is the winner of My Life Undecided! - Congrats Dawn!

misskallie2000 is the winner of Love at Absolute Zero!  - Congrats misskallie!


Both winners have been notified by email!

Stay tuned for more giveaways!

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

It's Not Monday - But I'm Gonna Tell You What I'm Reading Anyway! (Oct 18, 2011)



Well, a trip to my doctor, who then sent me to the ER kept me from doing my post yesterday!  Spent a day in the ER, waiting for an MRI, because she was afraid that I had a stroke.  Last week, after my weekend of the 2 day headache,  I started having an eye twitch in one eye, and then my second eye started feeling like I had something in it. All week long when I ate, it also felt like I had burnt my whole mouth, or that there was some kind of film in my mouth. So Saturday I called and made an appt for yesterday.  Sunday morning when I woke up, the whole left side of my face was numb.  It felt as if I had gone to the dentist and was filled with novacaine.  It wasn't until I went to the doc, that she pointed out that I had lost some facial muscle on my right side (so, I really didn't have anything in that eye - it just wasn't shutting all the way so was drying out.)  Off to the ER. 

Five hours, one blood draw, one I.V. and one MRI later - turns out I didn't have a stroke, I just had an atypical presentation of Bell's Palsy.  Now that I have had a couple of doses of drugs, the numbness has gone down immensely on my left, but my right eye is still painfully dry.  I have to wear an eye patch at night so I won't scratch it and have eye drops to use during the day. If you don't know what Bell's Palsy is, it is just a virus that you can get after you have had been sick with an infection.  It clears up, but can take anywhere from days to months with no way to predict.  So, I can live with that!  So let's get reading!

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:
Knit with Love: Stories to Warm a Knitter's Heart by Lisa Bogart 
The Kingdom of Childhood  by Rebecca Coleman
Love At Absolute Zero  by Christopher Meeks

Next Up:
The Comforts of Home by Jodi Thomas
A Dog's Way Home by Bobbie Pyron

Audio Book:
A Discovery of Witches: A Novel  by Deborah Harkness

E-Book:
Disrupted Lives by Brenda Youngerman

Next e-books up:
If I Tell by Janet Gurtler
An Accidental Mother  by Katherine Anne Kindred

Bathroom Book:
Good Graces  by Lesley Kagen


Reviewed Since Last Post:
Ding Dong the Diva's Dead by Cat Melodia
Love at Absolute Zero by Christopher Meeks
The "What's For Dinner?" Solution by Kathi Lipp



Waiting for Reviews:
 The Place of Belonging by Jayne Pearson Faulkner
The Blackberry Bush by David Housholder
The Girl in the Green Raincoat by Laura Lippman
Book Thief by Markus Zusak
Airmail by Naomi Bulger
Pie Town by Lynne Hinton
Chasing the Red Car by Ellen Ruderman
Whistling In the Dark  by Lesley Kegan
Darkness, My Old Friend: A Novel by Lisa Unger
Atonement by Ian McEwan
How Can You NOT Laugh at a Time Like This?: Reclaim Your Health with Humor, Creativity, and Grit by Carla Ulbrich

E-books waiting for review:
Sudden Moves by Kelli Sue Landon
This World We Live In (The Last Survivors, Book 3) by Susan Beth Pfeffer

Children's Books waiting for review:
Pearl's Wisdom by Auntie LuLu
Bug Meets His Friend (Bug's Adventure Series) by K.M. Groshek
Multiply on the Fly by Suzanne Slade
Ten for Me by Barbara Mariconda
Animalogy by Marianne Berkes
Prairie Storms by Darcy Pattison

READY - SET - READ!

First Wild Card Tour: The "What's For Dinner?" Solution (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 review:  I loved this book - and I can't wait to have a chance to start using some of her organizing tips for a recipe book and the pantry!  Okay, so the first half of the book is dedicated to actually getting your kitchen ready, to make your actual cooking time, if not more pleasurable, then at least more manageable.  She tells what works for her in regards to how she sets up her menu and kitchen.   She tries to set up a monthly menu - but not based on what she will actually cook, but on the cooking style - like freezer food, or crock pot.  Makes sense when you actually think about - to plan your meals based on the amount of time that you have to cook them!  Her recipe binder is then set up according to the cooking style, so that she can easily find what she is looking for.

This might sound like a lot of work - and in the beginning it might take some time to get organized and on a system - but can you imagine the time you will save after you are up and running?  I think this will also make it easier for the rest of my family to jump in and help with meal prep as well. 

So after you have your kitchen organized, your pantry stocked and so forth - she gives you a whole bunch of recipes and tips in the second half of the book to get you going.  I love her chapter on freezer cooking, as this is always something I have wanted to try.  She gives you some good recipes as well as some tips on what should or shouldn't be frozen.  Another category that she has is LOOP (Left-overs on purpose) recipes.  This is one that probably wouldn't work for us, but we usually try to implement a Left over night - where we just take out all the left overs from the fridge and everybody picks what they want to eat.  This usually happens on a Saturday.  It cleans out the fridge from the week for us and makes me feel better for not throwing away food. 

So, pick up a copy of this book, see what works for you and develop your own style for your family.  If you are like me, and cooking isn't your number one pleasure, then I think you will find this book encouraging and informative!
Today's Wild Card author is:


and the book:

Harvest House Publishers (October 1, 2011)
***Special thanks to Karri | Marketing Assistant, Harvest House Publishers for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Kathi Lipp is a busy conference and retreat speaker, currently speaking each year to thousands of women throughout the United States. She is the author of The Husband Project and The Marriage Project and has had articles published in several magazines, including Today’s Christian Woman and Discipleship Journal. Kathi and her husband, Roger, live in California and are the parents of four teenagers and young adults.

Visit the author's website.

SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:

For many women, dread turns to panic around 4:00 in the afternoon. That’s when they have to answer that age-old question, “What’s for dinner?” Many resort to another supermarket rotisserie chicken or—worse yet—ordering dinner through a drive-thru intercom.

In The “What’s for Dinner” Solution, popular author and speaker Kathi Lipp provides a full-kitchen approach for getting dinner on the table every night. After putting her 21-day plan into action, women will

* save time—with bulk shopping and cooking
* save money—no more last-minute phone calls to the delivery pizza place
* save their sanity—forget the last-minute scramble every night and know what they’re having for dinner

The book includes real recipes from real women, a quick guide to planning meals for a month, the best shopping strategies for saving time and money, and tips on the best ways to use a slow cooker, freezer, and pantry.

With Kathi’s book in hand, there’s no more need to hit the panic button.

Product Details:

List Price: $12.99
Paperback: 208 pages
Publisher: Harvest House Publishers (October 1, 2011)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0736938370
ISBN-13: 978-0736938372

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:

Girl Meets Kitchen, or Not

Necessarily a Love Story

“Happy and successful cooking doesn’t rely only on know-how;
it comes from the heart, makes great demands on the palate and needs enthusiasm and a deep love of food to bring it to life.”

Georges Blanc, from Ma Cuisine des Saisons


I was not the kind of kid who grew up at my mom’s knee, helping her chop carrots for Sunday night’s chicken soup. I never really helped with any meal preparation, preferring to turn my attention in the kitchen to baking. There was always some social event with friends or a youth group party where I needed to bring brownies. The one memorable time I tried to make instant potatoes? Instead of the specified one-quarter tablespoon of salt, I used a quarter cup salt. That incident happened over twenty-five years ago, and I have yet to stop hearing about it from my loving and encouraging family.

Suffice to say, I was a bit ill-prepared for the cooking adventures that lay ahead as I lived on my own for the first time. And to complicate matters? My first apartment was in Uji, Japan, approximately seven thousand miles from my mother’s loving embrace and her pot-roast recipe (as if I could afford beef in Japan).

The recipe cards were stacked against me. No cooking skills to speak of, living in a foreign land where most of the time I couldn’t identify what I was eating much less figure out how it was prepared, a kitchen the size of my coat closet back home, and an oven so small it made me long for the Easy-Bake one of my childhood.

I was terrified going to the supermarket without an escort and a translator. I didn’t speak the language (as a short-term missionary teaching conversational English, speaking Japanese was actually a disadvantage in my job), and as unfamiliar as I was with food shopping in the U.S., shopping in Uji was like watching a foreign movie without subtitles and then having to write a paper on the plot.

Oh, and eating out? So not an option. While my cooking skills were limited, my food budget was near nonexistent.

A few things were easy to recognize. The bread in Japan was amazing. It was buttery and flaky and perfect. And there was some really lovely cheese and ham. So, for the first three months of exploring this exotic new culture, I ate ham and cheese sandwiches every single night for dinner.

As I started to get to know some of my students and coworkers better, I had this urge to invite them over to hang out with me. But I had a sneaking suspicion they would want to be fed. I knew that my students would love some authentic American dishes. The question was, Who would I get to cook them?

Another short-term missionary, Diana, had a cookbook called More-With-Less. This wonderful little book produced by the Mennonite community had tons of recipes that used simple ingredients most cooks would have in their kitchen. While I didn’t have a lot of pantry staples in my four-story walk-up, I was now armed with a grocery list as well as an English-to-Japanese dictionary for my trips to the store.

I started to look for simple things I could make: salads, sandwiches, curries, and mini-pizzas out of English muffins and ketchup. (I promise, my culinary skills and taste have gotten better over the years.) As I grew braver in all things cuisine, I started to ask my mom to send some of my favorite recipes from back home.

In fact, when I threw a Christmas celebration with my friend Spenser in my micro-sized apartment, we managed to make a fondue-potless version of my mom’s Pizza Fondue. Shopping for the ingredients proved challenging, even for Spenser who spoke near-fluent Japanese. After several attempts to translate cornstarch into the native language (One would think corn + starch = cornstarch, right? Wrong. It’s pronounced korunstarcha.), we headed back to my kitchen and made one of the best meals I have ever eaten—lots of tomato sauce, some ground beef, loads of cheese, and just the right amount of korunstarcha.

Pizza Fondue
(Connie Richerson)

½ lb. ground beef

1 small onion, chopped

2 10½-oz. cans pizza sauce (I use marinara sauce)

1 T. cornstarch (or korunstarcha, if you prefer)

1½ tsp. oregano

¼ tsp. garlic powder

2 cups cheddar cheese, shredded

1 cup mozzarella cheese, shredded

1 loaf French bread

Brown the ground beef and onion; drain. Put meat, sauce, cornstarch, and spices in fondue pot. When cooked and bubbly, add cheese. Spear crusty French bread cubes, then dip and swirl in fondue. This is also delicious with breadsticks. Serves 4 to 6.

From that point on, I was hooked on collecting my favorite recipes. I bought my own copy of More-With-Less when I got back to the States, and when I got married a few months later, I received my very first copy of everyone’s favorite red-and-white-plaid Better Homes and Gardens New Cook Book, with every recipe an emerging home cook could want.

I think most of us home cooks have a similar story to tell. OK, you probably didn’t have your first significant cooking experience in Uji, Japan, but I bet the first few times you got dinner on the table all on your own, you might as well have been in a different country.

Maybe your mom had you peeling potatoes before you could walk. Maybe you have a rich heritage of recipes passed down from your grandmother. None of our cooking histories are going to look the same, but we do have one thing in common: We all need to get dinner on the table.

I am not a professional cook. Tom Colicchio will never be critiquing my braised kale and chocolate with bacon foam on Top Chef. But over the past twenty years I have put dinner on the table almost every single night. And while my family still likes a pizza from the neighborhood shop, our kids who have left home really look forward to coming back for a home-cooked meal.

That is all the reward I need.

Why This Book?

So, you discovered my deep dark secret—I’m not a professional chef. I don’t have my own show on Food Network, my own brand of spatulas, and I’m not going to be appearing on any morning show making a frittata for Kathie Lee Gifford.

Still, I’m required to feed our large family almost daily. So when I come across a cookbook, I have an unnatural need to own it. I’m always looking for new recipes to keep dinner interesting at our house. I have an entire bookshelf in my kitchen for my ever-growing collection.

But to be honest with you, most of the money I’ve spent on those cookbooks could have been better spent on a good set of knives or a heavy iron skillet.

I have found that most cookbooks are aimed at the fantasy life many of us aspire to—entertaining regularly, having unusual and exotic ingredients on hand, and hours and hours in the kitchen to create these masterpieces, from scratch.

And then there is my reality. Yes, sometimes I like to spend a Saturday afternoon cooking up a big feast for friends and family. But most days? I want to get a delicious, healthy meal on the table quickly.

My test when I’m purchasing new cookbooks? I flip to a half dozen or so recipes throughout the book and ask myself, Can I imagine cooking this recipe in the next couple of weeks? If most of the recipes fail the test, the book stays at the store.

I want the reality. I want dinner on the table every night without being seduced by pictures of stylist-arranged food that—let’s be honest—I’m never going to prepare.

While those books offer up a lot of grilled-chicken-in-a-peanut-sauce-in-the-sky dreams, I need some reality. It’s not just about the recipe; it’s about all the aspects of getting dinner on the table.

By the end of this book, my hope for you is that you will be able to:

save time, money, and energy when it comes to
preparing meals
have less stress when it comes to shopping
get your kitchen prepared for battle
learn some stress-free ways to get dinner on the table
get out of your cooking rut
This book is all about the process, the how of getting dinner on the table. It reflects the collective wisdom of hundreds of women who don’t have prep cooks or a crew of interns trying out new recipes. We are the women who spend a significant part of our days thinking about, shopping for, and preparing dinner. And all these wise, wonderful women are going to show you a better way to get dinner on the table no matter what your cooking background or skill level.

This is the book I wish I’d had when I first started cooking, as well as when I was raising my brood of pint-sized food critics.

Don’t worry, there will be plenty of recipes. We all love to find that one recipe that is going to become a family favorite! But this book has much more than that. My hope is that you will be able to use the recipes you already have, the ones in this book, and the new ones you find along the way to set a big, bountiful table for your family.

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