Showing posts with label 2013 Guest reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2013 Guest reviews. Show all posts

Saturday, November 16, 2013

TLC Book Tour: NOS4A2 by Joe Hill (Guest Review)


I was a bit overwhelmed by the new Stephen King to take on his son's novel, NOS4A2, so I enlisted my husband, the reader who can chomp through a thick book like this in two days, to do the honor.

I started listening to Heart-Shaped Box a few months back and it was pretty eerie. I know I will definitely embrace Joe Hill's work more at some point. 

Sean's Review:

While I may not have as much time to read, what little I get is sometimes infused with great writing. This book was actually pretty good. He has his fathers penchant for the overly descriptive scenes which I happened to grow up on, so of course it grabbed me immediately. I would say any reader of Stephen King would similarly enjoy this story. As always, I could do without the "Chester the Molester" type character but who else could better play the 'devil' than that!? Really, the book stands alone without having to ride the old man's coattails too much, even with Stephen's winking reference to his son's book in "Dr. Sleep" ; he only references the Charlie Manx (antagonist) once, but it does tie in to that twisted reality that belies the genre. Over all, I found the book quite haunting, and intend to follow future publications by this author. Thumbs up.};^)>


About Joe Hill

The author of the critically acclaimed Heart-Shaped Box, Joe Hill is a two-time winner of the Bram Stoker Award and a past recipient of the Ray Bradbury Fellowship. His stories have appeared in a variety of journals and Year’s Best collections. He calls New England home.
Find out more about Joe at his website and follow him on Twitter: @joe_hill.

Joe’s Tour Stops

Tuesday, October 22nd: A Bookish Way of Life
Thursday, October 24th: The Best Books Ever
Monday, November 4th: Bibliophilia, Please
Tuesday, November 5th: The House of Crime and Mystery
Thursday, November 7th: Love, Laughter, and a Touch of Insanity
Friday, November 8th: Drey’s Library
Monday, November 11th: Entomology of a Bookworm
Tuesday, November 12th: The Book Bag
Wednesday, November 13th: The Reader’s Hollow
Thursday, November 14th: red headed book child
Monday, November 18th:  The Road to Here
Tuesday, November 19th: Olduvai Reads
Wednesday, November 20th: The Scarlet Letter
Thursday, November 21st: Cerebral Girl in a Redneck World
Thursday, November 28th: My Shelf Confessions
Thanks Sean!
Happy Reading and as always, thanks for stopping by!
red headed book child

Friday, November 8, 2013

TLC Book Tour: The Death of Bees by Lisa O'Donnell (Guest Reviewer)


The Death of Bees by Lisa O’Donnell


Today is Christmas Eve.
Today is my birthday.
Today I am fifteen.
Today I buried my parents in the backyard.
Neither of them were beloved.

Marnie and her little sister, Nelly, are on their own now. Only they know what happened to their parents, Izzy and Gene, and they aren't telling. While life in Glasgow's Maryhill housing estate isn't grand, the girls do have each other. Besides, it's only a year until Marnie will be considered an adult and can legally take care of them both.

As the New Year comes and goes, Lennie, the old man next door, realizes that his young neighbors are alone and need his help. Or does he need theirs? Lennie takes them in—feeds them, clothes them, protects them—and something like a family forms. But soon enough, the sisters' friends, their teachers, and the authorities start asking tougher questions. As one lie leads to another, dark secrets about the girls' family surface, creating complications that threaten to tear them apart.

Written with fierce sympathy and beautiful precision, told in alternating voices, The Death of Bees is an enchanting, grimly comic tale of three lost souls who, unable to answer for themselves, can answer only for one another.

Cheryl’s review

I heard a review of this book on NPR (http://www.npr.org/2013/01/05/168558333/death-of-bees-captures-a-grim-gory-coming-of-age?sc=17&f=1032) last January and added it to my list of books to read. The opening is attention-grabbing and peaked my interest to read the book.

The book is told from three different voices: Marnie, Nelly, and Lennie. The perspectives change quickly, most are only a few pages (or less) but this doesn’t detract from following the story. Sometimes the same event is told from all three perspectives but generally the story continues to progress when the voice changes.

The Death of Bees is a tragic story and O’Donnell aptly captures the “coming of age” story. Marnie vascillates between her desire to act and be seen as an adult while longing to remain someone’s child. Both Marnie and Nelly constantly search for guidance and parent-substitutes, which they sometimes find unexpectedly and sometimes even in each other.

The story seemed to spiral downward by continually creating more challenges and obstacles for the characters to deal with. As the premise of the book started in a tragic way, that wasn’t surprising and I read wondering how the story would be resolved. The ending was abrupt and went in an unexpected direction, which was a bit jarring. Overall, it was an interesting read. It was tragic and sad but the characters were determined and resourceful. They all had the goal to survive as best as they could and also learned from each other. What perhaps they learned most was about who they really were and the meaning of family.


Author Info:
Visit Lisa at her website, connect with her on Facebook, and follow her on Twitter.

Lisa’s Tour Stops

Wednesday, October 23rd: Peppermint PhD
Friday, October 25th: Booksie’s Blog
Monday, October 28th: she treads softly
Wednesday, October 30th: Book-alicious Mama
Thursday, October 31st: Olduvai Reads
Monday, November 4th: Love at First Book
Tuesday, November 5th: A Bookish Way of Life
Wednesday, November 6th: red headed book child
Thursday, November 7th: From the TBR Pile
Tuesday, November 12th: Peeking Between the Pages
Thursday, November 14th: guiltless reading
Thanks Cheryl!
Happy Reading and as always, thanks for stopping by!
red headed book child

Monday, October 7, 2013

TLC Book Tour: The Round House by Louise Erdrich (Guest Review)

You've heard from her before. My book loving friend Cheryl gives her take on the latest award winning book by Louise Erdrich.

One Sunday in the spring of 1988, a woman living on a reservation in North Dakota is attacked. The details of the crime are slow to surface as Geraldine Coutts is traumatized and reluctant to relive or reveal what happened, either to the police or to her husband, Bazil, and thirteen-year-old son, Joe. In one day, Joe's life is irrevocably transformed. He tries to heal his mother, but she will not leave her bed and slips into an abyss of solitude. Increasingly alone, Joe finds himself thrust prematurely into an adult world for which he is ill prepared.
While his father, who is a tribal judge, endeavors to wrest justice from a situation that defies his efforts, Joe becomes frustrated with the official investigation and sets out with his trusted friends, Cappy, Zack, and Angus, to get some answers of his own. Their quest takes them first to the Round House, a sacred space and place of worship for the Ojibwe. And this is only the beginning.
Written with undeniable urgency, and illuminating the harsh realities of contemporary life in a community where Ojibwe and white live uneasily together, The Round House is a brilliant and entertaining novel, a masterpiece of literary fiction. Louise Erdrich embraces tragedy, the comic, a spirit world very much present in the lives of her all-too-human characters, and a tale of injustice that is, unfortunately, an authentic reflection of what happens in our own world today.


Cheryl’s Review


Louise Erdrich has long on my list of authors to read, but The Round House is the first of her novels I read.


The book description says the characters as “all-too-human.” Erdrich develops the characters in a way that one can identify with nearly all of them in some way. She beautifully captures the emotional depth of the characters and their relationships wtih each other. Joe, the main character, struggles with wanting to remain a free-spirited child while longing to be an adult; his father is trying to help his wife recover from her trauma and find her justice while trying to raise a boy; and his mother grapples with the memories of her trauma and knowing she and her life will never be the same.


Joe’s devotion to his mother and wanting to know, and understand, all the details of what happened is the center of the story. This incident, whether he is fully aware or not, feeds into and marks changes his relationships with his parents, relatives, and friends. He wants to go back to the way things were but knows that is impossible. The setting of 1988 adds many layers to the characters and their relationships. Erdrich interweaves how women and Native Americans are treated and viewed in society, and how those complications affected the characters’ development and the story’s outcome.

The Round House
makes me want to read more of Erdrich’s books. Her realistic story and characters are easy to read but accurately depicts the complex situation of living on a reservation in a larger society with different rules and perspectives. At its heart, it is a coming of age story of a boy becoming a man and how the world is changing around him.



Tour Schedule:

Tuesday, September 24th: Lavish Bookshelf
Wednesday, September 25th: she treads softly
Thurssday, September 26th: The Lost Entwife
Monsday, September 30th: Book-alicious Mama
Tuesday, October 1st: Bound by Words
Wednesday, October 2nd: Booksie’s Blog
Thursday, October 3rd: Books Speak Volumes
Monday, October 7th: red headed book child
Tuesday, October 8th: The Blog of Lit Wits
Wednesday, October 9th: Lit and Life
Thursday, October 10th: Book Addict Katie
Monday, October 14th: Dolce Bellezza
Tuesday, October 15th: guiltless reading
Wednesday, October 17th: Lectus
Monday, October 21st: Becca’s Byline
Tuesday, October 22nd: Cerebral Girl in a Redneck World
Thursday, October 23rd: Turn the Page
Thursday, October 24th: Book Snob

Author Info:
Louise Erdrich doesn't have a website but here's her official Facebook page


Thanks again Cheryl for stopping by!
Happy Reading and as always, thanks for stopping by!

red headed book child

Monday, September 23, 2013

TLC Book Tour: Telegraph Avenue by Michael Chabon (Guest Reviewer)

I picked this one for my husband who is a musician and a major music lover. I thought this would be right up his alley. He is my Guest Reviewer this time around. 

Enjoy!

As the summer of 2004 draws to a close, Archy Stallings and Nat Jaffe are still hanging in there—longtime friends, bandmates, and co-regents of Brokeland Records, a kingdom of used vinyl located in the borderlands of Berkeley and Oakland. Their wives, Gwen Shanks and Aviva Roth-Jaffe, are the Berkeley Birth Partners, two semi-legendary midwives who have welcomed more than a thousand newly minted citizens into the dented utopia at whose heart—half tavern, half temple—stands Brokeland.

When ex-NFL quarterback Gibson Goode, the fifth-richest black man in America, announces plans to build his latest Dogpile megastore on a nearby stretch of Telegraph Avenue, Nat and Archy fear it means certain doom for their vulnerable little enterprise. Meanwhile, Aviva and Gwen also find themselves caught up in a battle for their professional existence, one that tests the limits of their friendship. Adding another layer of complication to the couples' already tangled lives is the surprise appearance of Titus Joyner, the teenage son Archy has never acknowledged and the love of fifteen-year-old Julius Jaffe's life.

An intimate epic, a NorCal Middlemarch set to the funky beat of classic vinyl soul-jazz and pulsing with a virtuosic, pyrotechnical style all its own,Telegraph Avenue is the great American novel we've been waiting for. Generous, imaginative, funny, moving, thrilling, humane, and triumphant. (Goodreads)



Sean's review:

Having read the Amazing adventures of Kavalier and Clay, I was somewhat familiar with Chabon's wordy and colorful prose; when I heard Telegraph Avenue is about 'An independent record store facing the future' my interests had been piqued. Like 'Kavalier' all of the characters are heavily flawed, and have a Vonnegut-esque interdependence on their respective relevance as a plot device. While I do appreciate Chabon's verbose and plentiful use of metaphor and allegory, it does almost detract from the plot itself. I was expecting a story about an indy record shop, and it was, but so heavily mired in developing character and plot devices that it becomes the stream-of-consciousness typical of 'Kavalier', or indeed Kurt Vonnegut. A fun read, but has as much to do with running a record shop as 'Kavalier' is about coming up with the "superman" comic book series.
Author's Info:
website and Facebook page.

Full Blog Tour Schedule:

Tuesday, September 10th: Lavish Bookshelf
Wednesday, September 11th: Turn the Page
Tuesday, September 17th: guiltless reading
Monday, September 23rd: red headed book child
Tuesday, September 24th: missris
Wednesday, September 25th: Tiffany’s Bookshelf
Thursday, September 26th: A Bookish Way of Life
Monday, September 30th: What She Read …
Tuesday, October 1st: The House of the Seven Tails
Wednesday, October 2nd: As Usual, I Need More Bookshelves
Thursday, October 3rd: From L.A. to LA
Thursday, October 3rd: Amused By Books
Monday, October 7th: The Lost Entwife
Tuesday, October 8th: Nite Lite
Wednesday, October 9th: Too Fond 
Thursday, October 10th: 50 Books Project
Thanks Sean for reviewing and thanks to Trish for letting us be on the tour!
Happy Reading and as always, thanks for stopping by!
red headed book child

Monday, September 16, 2013

TLC Book Tour: The Cutting Season by Attica Locke (Guest Reviewer)


I read this book earlier this year and posted a review then. When the blog tour option came my way, I knew that my friend, Cheryl would be great for this one. I enjoyed the book and I knew she would too.


From the website (http://www.atticalocke.com/):
Caren Gray is the general manager of Belle Vie, a sprawling antebellum plantation where the past and the present coexist uneasily. The estate’s owners have turned the place into an eerie tourist attraction complete with full-dress reenactments and carefully restored slave quarters. Outside the gates, an ambitious corporation has been busy snapping up land from struggling families who have grown sugar cane for generations, replacing local employees with illegal laborers. Tensions mount when the body of a female migrant worker is found in a shallow grave on the edge of the property, her throat cut clean. The list of suspects is long, but when the cops zero in on a person of interest, Caren has a feeling they’re chasing the wrong leads. Putting herself at risk, she unearths startling new facts about an old mystery—the long-ago disappearance of a former slave—that has unsettling ties to the modern-day crime. In pursuit of the truth about Belle Vie’s history—and her own—Caren discovers secrets about both cases that an increasingly desperate killer will do anything to keep hidden.
Taut, hauntingly resonant, and beautifully written, The Cutting Season is at once a thoughtful meditation on how America reckons its past with its future and a high-octane page-turner that unfolds with tremendous skill and vision, demonstrating once again that Locke is “a writer wise beyond her years” (Los Angeles Times).

Cheryl's review:

The Cutting Season is a book with many layers. Though the book takes place entirely in the present, Locke’s expressive writing and characters provide a story that blends the past and present to provide the reader with an emotional and historical understanding of rural Louisiana.

Caren’s suspicions that the wrong person is accused of the migrant worker’s murder revives the history of Belle Vie and therefore, the history of her family and ancestors. The questions raised through the investigation make her assess her place at Belle Vie, both as manager and her childhood memories. Along the way, the characters weave in and out and and often influence how Caren works through her doubts about herself and her past.

The Cutting Season centers around a mystery but is also a family and Southern history. Locke’s storytelling transports the reader into the different times and lives of living in rural Louisiana. The characters’ deep roots and emotional ties to Belle Vie and Louisiana intertwine and it’s easy to get caught up in their lives. Though the book is a mystery, the murder was a catalyst for Caren and others to examine their places in the present and reconcile their ties to the past. Locke’s conclusion is a realistic portrayal that not everything can be tied up neatly and that sometimes the past should remain in the past.


Author Info:

Blog Tour:

Tuesday, September 17th: red headed book child
Wednesday, September 18th: Time 2 Read
Thursday, September 19th: Book-alicious Mama
Monday, September 23rd: BoundbyWords
Tuesday, September 24th: Kritters Ramblings
Wednesday, September 25th: Peppermint PhD
Thursday, September 26th: Lectus
Monday, September 30th: Booksie’s Blog
Tuesday, October 1st: Olduvai Reads
Monday, October 7th: M. Denise C. 
Thank you Cheryl for being a terrific Guest Reviewer and 
TLC Book Tour Host this time around.

Happy Reading and as always, thanks for stopping by!

red headed book child

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Guest Review and Blog Tour: The King's Deception by Steve Berry

I like to joke with my friend and fabulous Guest Reviewer that she is such a dude reader.  Her love for authors like Nelson Demille, John Jakes and Steve Berry is so funny to me because she also is a fan of seriously fluffy chick lit. Cheryl's got range and that is what makes her a book know-it-all and lover of all things literary.

 I could not pass up this blog tour so I asked her to hop on with me.


Book description from the website (http://steveberry.org/books/the-kings-deception/synopsis/):


Cotton Malone and his fifteen-year-old son, Gary, are headed to Europe. As a favor to his old boss at the Justice Department, Malone agrees to escort a teenage fugitive back to England. After a gunpoint greeting in London in which both the fugitive and Gary disappear, Malone learns that he’s stumbled into a high-stakes diplomatic showdown-an international incident fueled by geopolitical gamesmanship and shocking Tudor secrets.

At its heart is the Libyan terrorist convicted of bombing Pan Am Flight 103, who is set to be released by Scottish authorities for ‘humanitarian reasons.’ An outraged American government wants that stopped, but nothing can persuade the British to intervene.
Except, perhaps, Operation King’s Deception.
Run by the CIA, the operation aims to solve a centuries-old mystery, one that could rock Great Britain to its royal foundations.
CIA Operative Blake Antrim, in charge of King’s Deception, is hunting for the spark that could rekindle a most dangerous fire: the one thing that every Irish national has sought for centuries-a legal reason why the English must leave Northern Ireland. The answer is a long-buried secret that calls into question the legitimacy of the entire 45 year reign of Elizabeth I, the last Tudor monarch, who completed the conquest of Ireland and seized much of its land. But Antrim also has a more personal agenda, a twisted game of revenge in which Gary is a pawn. With assassins, traitors, spies, and dangerous disciples of a secret society closing in, Malone is caught in a lethal bind. To save Gary he must play one treacherous player against another-and only by uncovering the incredible truth can he hope to stop the shattering consequences of the King’s Deception.

Cheryl’s review:

I started reading Steve Berry several years ago. Once I find an author I like, I do my best to read all or as many as possible of his or her books. When Michelle asked me if I wanted to review The King’s Deception, I realized I was behind on my Steve Berry reading. So within a week, I read two novels and four short stories to catch up before starting the new one.

Berry’s short story “The Tudor Plot” is a prequel to The King’s Deception and provides a bit of a back story but it’s not necessary to read it first. With The King’s Deception, Berry continues his Cotton Malone series and delivers his usual fast-paced thriller with numerous twists and turns. Having read all his books, Berry follows his usual formula of creating a race between bad guys and slightly less bad guys trying to expose or bury a deep dark historical secret while the good guys (Cotton Malone) try to figure out the mystery to stop the world from finding out the secret that could change the course of history and the future.

What is enjoyable about Berry’s book is knowing what to expect and having him deliver, while he always adds a few unpredictable twists and turns. The King’s Deception transports the reader to England’s royalty history filled with secrets and conspiracies. He leads readers in a direction where they think they have it all figured out, then surprises the reader by veering in a different direction. It was strange to have a book without Cassiopeia Vitt, but Berry always brings in new and sometimes returning characters to provide Malone with friends, enemies, and frenemies. As someone who works alone and on the fringe, Malone has to figure out who the enemies are and who is on his side, with alliances often changing for surprising reasons.

I read a lot of thrillers and Steve Berry is always one I return to. I like that he takes historical events and twists them into modern day conspiracies, providing a history lesson that leaves you thinking “what if?” One aspect I appreciate about Berry is his explanations at the end to clarify what’s true and what he concocted. It’s easy to tell that Berry does extensive research to ensure he portrays historical facts and figures accurately prior to adding his own layer of intrigue. After reading The King’s Deception, and after I read any of his books, I always want to go to the library to read more about the central historical plot.

The King’s Deception is a perfect summer read. Even though there are references to previous books’ plots and characters, it’s not necessary to read Berry’s books in order. Unless he comes out with more short stories, I will have to wait until next year to see where Berry’s imagination and research collide into an edge-of-your-seat thrill ride through the past and present.


What an awesome review Cheryl! Thanks!

Doesn't it make you want to read it? Check out his website for more info and some rave reviews under the below link.

Author Website:


Happy Reading and as always, thanks for stopping by!

red headed book child