…wouldn't that be sweet?

Tag Archives: books


30 Days of Books Day 10 and Yes I am alive!

So I was over on my Tumblr doing this meme and then I was like…..why am I not posting these on my blog, you know, the internet space I am paying for? And so then I smacked myself like I coulda had a V8.

So anyway, I am going to start with Day 10 here. Days 1-9 can be found on my Tumblr as well as the rest of the days going forward so you can follow wherever you please!

Day 10- Favorite Classic book.

 I was going to go with Pride and Prejudice because I do so love Ms. Jane Austen, but I decided to go with my fave book of all time, To Kill a MockingBird:

I can’t even tell you anymore why this is my favorite book. It might have been the first classic I ever read, something I really enjoyed in high school and whenever I think of a really great book, this one comes to mind. In fact, I may re-read this soon. It’s been forever since I read it last.

From Goodreads:

The unforgettable novel of a childhood in a sleepy Southern town and the crisis of conscience that rocked it, To Kill A Mockingbird became both an instant bestseller and a critical success when it was first published in 1960. It went on to win the Pulitzer Prize in 1961 and was later made into an Academy Award-winning film, also a classic.

Compassionate, dramatic, and deeply moving, To Kill A Mockingbird takes readers to the roots of human behavior – to innocence and experience, kindness and cruelty, love and hatred, humor and pathos. Now with over 18 million copies in print and translated into forty languages, this regional story by a young Alabama woman claims universal appeal. Harper Lee always considered her book to be a simple love story. Today it is regarded as a masterpiece of American literature.

Also, yes I am quite alive. I have been alternately busy, bored out of my mind, uninspired, and writing up a storm. I now have an idea for my Secret Santa Story Exchange project and I’m trudging my way through a new serial story that I’ve started at the archive.

I have read 43 books toward my Goodreads goal of 50 books read during 2011. SO CLOSE! I’m confident I’ll be able to finish since I have some time off coming up for the holidays. I’m excited about actually achieving that goal.

Toward the end of the year I think I am going to try to count up all my words and see what I produced this year. I was initially going for 350K, but  I dropped out of that challenge. I still want to see what I managed to churn out.

How about YOU, Blogosphere? What’s cookin’?

Categories: Books I Loved, Random | Leave a Comment »

Catching Up!

It’s been a whirlwind week at Chez Jones, and this week is going to be a bit of one, too. Therefore, I got no writing done. Not really a big deal since I have zero ideas and nothing I’m really working on ATM. Im  fresh out of ideas, so maybe this is a good time for another one of those breaks I’m so famous for.

I did a lot of flying and a lot of waiting in hotel rooms, so I got some reading done, so much that I am two books ahead of my GoodReads goal for 2011! Woot! I only have 10 more books to read to hit my goal of 50 books read this year. Amazingly awesome. Quite proud of that, even though it makes me sound like the most boring person on the planet.

Oh, well.

I won’t have any issues finding books to read… I’ve ordered a crapton over the last week, all to do with the WIP I thought I was writing for NaNoWriMo. Crazy thing? I don’t want to write that story anymore. Bleh. I wish I had an idea I cared about that would stick.

Anywhoozle. This coming weekend I am going to be out of town so hopefully I will find something to write about this week.

 

Categories: Random, Writers Read | Leave a Comment »

DIYMFA: Books on Writing, in which I confess…

A brief note before I post: Day three of the 30 Day Writing challenge is up on my Tumblr! If you’re participating by blog or Tumblr please let me know so I can follow!

So, today we are discussing building a library on the craft of writing. And I have a confession to make: I buy writing books all the time but don’t read them. I have several books of writing exercises but don’t really make use of them. It hasn’t been a medium that has been effective for me… it’s that feeling of flipping through a book and realizing it’s in a language you can’t read. In fact, I become overwhelmed and quite stressed out after reading them because I feel like I have no idea how to apply what I’ve just read to something I’m currently writing.  I am much more of a writing blog reader than I am a writing book reader, though I do have a couple of writing books I like:

Read the rest of this entry »

Categories: Books I Loved, Writers Write | 3 Comments »

#Friday Reads 2/25

It’s that time again! Friday Reads is when we talk about what we’re readin’!

My reading has been considerably slower this month than last. I was entirely more productive in January than February, but in my defense, I had a lot of writing I wanted to get done. Since I’ve finished that story  (that was hanging over my head),  I have more time. I wish I could say I’ve filled it with reading, but that would only be a 1/4 truth. Not even a half truth. *shame*

On with it! Let’s chat about what I’m reading… these are the books most active in my ‘Currently Reading Pile’.

I’ve been an avid reader of PastaQueen for nearly three years. Back when I was trying to lose some weight (never did manage to outrun those lbs, the suckers) I was looking for inspiration and someone linked her blog and I was hooked, right away. I love a success story, and when Jennette Fulda, the Queen of Pasta herself, announced that she was writing a book, I was ultra excited. Half Assed, her weight loss memoir, was her first. Chocolate and Vicodin is her second, about the headache that is like the Little Engine That Could. Since February 2008, Jennette has had a constant headache. At a time in her life when she should be deliriously happy and celebrating, she is knocked to her knees by debilitating head pain. My father suffers from chronic migraines and back pain on a constant basis, has for as long as I can remember. I have friends who are migraine sufferers. If nothing, Chocolate and Vicodin brings the experience home and puts it into words which are down to earth and even humorous. I don’t know how Jennette does it… if I’d had  a headache for 3 years, I would be pretty unbearable right now. Great read so far… very entertaining.

Minding Ben , by Victoria Brown p. 26 of 352 (7%)

I won this book through Goodreads FirstReads program. It took a bit to get into it, but I’m now on my way! This book promises to be The Nanny Diaries meets The Help (have read both and hold both in high regard). It is the story of Grace, a young woman from Trinidad who travels to New York in search of the American Dream. What she finds is work with a family that pays meager wages for demanding work and an underground network of the West Indian babysitting community. I’m interested in digging into this book further.

Daughter of Joy , by Kathleen Morgan p. 46 of 336 (13%)

It’s odd that I am a Christian but I shy away from Christian fiction. I often find it preachy, instead of simply having a book where the characters are believers and not… I dunno…  non believers. If I want to read a sermon, I will open my Bible, or tune into the 800million churches here in ATL that broadcast their nightly services. I stumbled upon this book and decided to read it without realizing that it was Christian fiction. I kept reading it because it is also historical fiction, sort of a favorite genre, lately. Abigail Stanton is a widow who’s child recently passed away. She’s looking for an escape from her old life while she heals, and happens upon Culdee Creek’s Conor McKay, a surly-yet-handsome, wifeless man with a wild one of a daughter and a son who’s on the wind.  This story seems pretty predictable, but then again a lot of love stories are. That won’t stop anyone from reading them. This one is moving a bit slowly, but I am determined to stick with it.

Slammerkin , by Emma Donoghue p. 50 of 408 (12%)

I haven’t read past my last spot a few weeks ago. This book reads entirely more difficult than Room. I am interested in the story but it is set in London. Which, for no reason, is about my least favorite setting in a book. Slammerkin might join the ranks of Stiff, another book I just haven’t been able to dig into.

Damage , by John Lescroart p. 103 of 416 (24%)

Made  a bit of progress in this book this week. Lescroart does a great job of building suspense, piling story elements on top of each other like bricks. It really is just beginning to get good. I’ll probably dig into this over the weekend. Did I mention I miss Dismas Hardy?

Categories: Authored Inspiration, Books I Loved, Writers Read | Leave a Comment »

#FridayReads February 4th!

It’s time yet again for Friday Reads! May be a truncated version today because I’ve got sort of a busy day and an idea bubbling over in my mind. I need to get some things worked out and down on paper.

I am going to simply copy what I wrote from a few titles last week, as I am still reading them:

Damage, by John Lescroart- Another new book I started but have only read a page, so far. I LOVE Lescroart so I’m not worried about this book at all. Hoping to spend most of my weekend buried in this one.

Roseflower Creek, by Jackie Lee Miles -I got this book as a freebie from Amazon/B&N. Just started it, seems interesting and a good read, but I’m not far enough into it to say what I like, don’t like. It’s set in the 1950′s south (so you know I’m all over it) . This book begins, “The morning I died it rained. Poured down so hard it washed the blood off my face.” I’m hooked.

Stiff , by Mary Roach- Still chugging away at this book. I really want to enjoy it, it’s just sort of boring. I am going to try to get it out of the way this weekend so I can stop looking at it on my Currently Reading list.

The Help,  by Katherine Stockett- I’m listening to this audio book in the car. I read the book back in 2009, thoroughly enjoyed it and am happy to be revisiting it. Since it’s an old book, I’m not counting it toward my 2011 goal.

I finished Water for Elephants and reviewed it HERE. It was okay, not awful but not awesome.

New Reads:

I’ve got some mailbox love lately!

Slammerkin: I read Ms Donoghue’s Room and LOVED it, so I sought out other books by her that I might enjoy. Slammerkin sort of stuck out to me and I copped a paperback edition from GoodReads Swap. What a GREAT way to get a used book for about $3– take it off someone’s hands! I just started it, I’m on page 30. Gripping and intriguing so far. It is, however, print and it takes me longer to read print books. Sometimes they end up errr… in the bathroom… I’m embarrassed to note how many books I have in there.

The others, I haven’t yet started. I got them either through the Swap or via the FirstReads program which is GREAT for getting your hands on newly released books. It’s always a crap shoot because it’s enter to win, but I’ve won 2 copies of books so far!

I guess you know what *I* will be doing over the weekend!

Categories: Authored Inspiration, Writers Read | Leave a Comment »

Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen [Review]

Water for Elephants Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen

My rating: 2 of 5 stars

As a young man, Jacob Jankowski was tossed by fate onto a rickety train that was home to the Benzini Brothers Most Spectacular Show on Earth. It was the early part of the great Depression, and for Jacob, now ninety, the circus world he remembers was both his salvation and a living hell. A veterinary student just shy of a degree, he was put in charge of caring for the circus menagerie. It was there that he met Marlena, the beautiful equestrian star married to August, the charismatic but twisted animal trainer. And he met Rosie, an untrainable elephant who was the great gray hope for this third-rate traveling show. The bond that grew among this unlikely trio was one of love and trust, and, ultimately, it was their only hope for survival.

I started this book on the audio version, at first a bit turned off by the obvious attempt to make the narrator sound aged. On reflection, I simply wasn’t a fan of the narrator, and that, plus an intriguing story line is what makes an audio book interesting for me. I can only listen to a book in the car, so if it can’t block out traffic irritation for me, it isn’t an audio book that’s going to work for me. Not only did the narrator irritate me, but so did traffic. It wasn’t engrossing or distracting at all.

By the time I switched to the eBook, interest in this novel was on life support. I’ve found that while I read, I skip a lot. Too much detail? Skim. Boring dialog I don’t care about? Skip. When I’m unable to skip past parts I don’t feel like reading, I feel trapped by the author in the minutiae and I resent that. Once I picked up the eBook, I was able to read more quickly, pick up the story and get to the climax.

Water for Elephants is set in a Depression Era circus called the Benzini Brothers Most Spectacular Show on Earth. The RingMaster, Uncle Al and his right hand man, the Equestrian Director August, quite clearly want to be Ringling Brothers. They’ll never measure up, but that doesn’t stop them from trying. The main character, Jacob, ends up with the Benzini Brothers after he loses his parents, his future, and his home, all in one fell swoop. One moment a promising veterinarian with a promising practice waiting for him. The next, “roustabout” shoveling animal dung out of stalls.

When Big Al finds him stowing away, his Veterinary knowledge is his only saving grace. He’s hired as the Circus Vet, to work with the animals, namely to check out the show’s stars: Silver Star and her trainer, Marlena. It’s obvious, right away, that Jacob has a “thing” for Marlena. Who is married to August.

Drama ensues, and becomes the crux of the entire story.

In between tales of life on the rails with the Circus are interspersed stories of Jacob in the future, in his 90′s, reminiscing, remembering, regretting. He is long forgotten in a nursing home, resentful of the fact that he’s living amongst those who aren’t in their right minds. The highlight of Jacob’s week is a visit to the local circus that’s in town. He’s been looking forward to it for days.

I checked a few other reviews, just to make sure that my analysis of the characters wasn’t totally off. I liked Jacob, some. Not a whole lot, but I think that was more an issue with the narrator than anything. His naivete kept me biting my nails and his bravery came so late in the story that it was maddening. August was confusing… the revealing of his mental condition came too late, for me. I think it would have added to the plot if it had been revealed earlier in the story. I wasn’t a fan of Marlena. Her characterization fell flat, to me. The convenience of her feelings seemed sudden and unexplained and her damsel-in-distress act didn’t bring any feelings of sorrow or worry.

I did feel for the elephant, Rosie. She made me laugh and cry and cheer. Smart animal. Very smart animal.

In my rating, 5 stars is impeccable, 4 is very good, 3 is okay, average. This book scored a firm 2 for me. It wasn’t awful. It wasn’t really good, either.

View all my reviews

Categories: Authored Inspiration, Reviews, Writers Read | 2 Comments »

#FridayReads Jan 28

It’s Friday again, and time for another #FridayReads! Every Friday, we booklovers chat it up about what we’re reading. Here’s my list:

Water for Elephants, by Sara Gruen – Sad to say, I’m not enjoying this book. Actually I’m not enjoying the audio book. I have the physical book and I’ll probably switch to that. The audio-book is always a matter of a compelling story that I can get lost in and an excellent narrator. I DO NOT like the narrator for this book and I find I just don’t care about the main character quite yet. I’ll pick up the eBook version this week where I left off.

Damage, by John Lescroart- Another new book I started but have only read a page, so far. I LOVE Lescroart so I’m not worried about this book at all. Hoping to spend most of my weekend buried in this one.

Roseflower Creek, by Jackie Lee Miles -I got this book as a freebie from Amazon/B&N. Just started it, seems interesting and a good read, but I’m not far enough into it to say what I like, don’t like. It’s set in the 1950′s south (so you know I’m all over it) . This book begins, “The morning I died it rained. Poured down so hard it washed the blood off my face.” I’m hooked.

Stif , by Mary Roach- Still chugging away at this book. I really want to enjoy it, it’s just sort of boring. I am going to try to get it out of the way this weekend so I can stop looking at it on my Currently Reading list.

The Help,  by Katherine Stockett- I’m listening to this audio book in the car. I read the book back in 2009, thoroughly enjoyed it and am happy to be revisiting it. Since it’s an old book, I’m not counting it toward my 2011 goal.

Categories: Authored Inspiration, Books I Hated, Books I Loved, Writers Read | Leave a Comment »

The Kitchen House by Kathleen Grissom [Review]

The Kitchen HouseThe Kitchen House by Kathleen Grissom

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I have to start by saying I LOVED THIS BOOK. I got this as an audio book, a something to listen to that would ease my traffic woes and it WORKED. I can only concentrate on audio books in the car, so it got to where I was making up reasons to leave the house. A trip across the street became a reason to get 10 more minutes in. I savored every bite and morsel I could get, and though it only took me a few days to listen to it all, it felt like this book would never end, and yet I could not stop “reading”.

Lavinia, orphaned at 7 years old, has been brought to Tall Oaks Tobacco plantation as an indentured servant. She’s put under the guidance of Belle, Captain Pike’s illegitimate daughter, and Mama Mae, the matriarch of the “family”. Over the years, Belle begins to feel as if Tall Oaks is her home and the servants are her family, even though she is white and they are black. She also doesn’t seem to know the difference between herself and the others and no one feels the need to point it out. Lavinia only learns that she is quite different when she is allowed to go to church and doesn’t understand why her friends the twins must stand at the back of the church while she is allowed to sit up front.

Eventually, Lavinia is accepted into the world of the big house, where she finds that all that glitters is not gold. The Captain, though kind to his servants is absent and the mistress falls prey to an addiction. The Captain’s family believe that Belle is the Master’s mistress, not his daughter, so there is tension in the household among Belle and Mrs. Pike.

This situation, though not altogether pleasant, is not the nightmare it could be, and of course is too good to be true. When the Master falls ill and eventually dies, here comes trouble and the start fury and upheaval at Tall Oaks, so much that I could not mentally turn the pages fast enough. Captain Pike’s son Marshall becomes the new Master and he is nowhere near the kind soul his father was. Tall Oaks descends into a nightmare.

The Kitchen House is full of suspense, and moments where I said loud, “No, don’t!’ and “Oh you dumbass!” and ‘I want someone to shoot Marshall!”

I felt the main characters were well defined, and when even they weren’t, it was frustrating, but fitting. The story bounces between Lavinia and Belle, and since we see the story through their eyes, feel their confusion and pain, it’s only right that we don’t know the entire story from everyone’s point of view.

I found myself alternately rooting for and upset with Lavinia. Her naivete and ignorance was annoying, and the “family’s” insistence on keeping her within that cloud made for a lot of drama. So many times, issues could have been resolved without punishment if someone would have just said something… but they decided not to and the drama continued.

I was completely enthralled with this story– it is well written with an incredible climax and a satisfying ending. I would be very excited to read more from Kathleen Grissom. I very very rarely give five stars to a book, but this novel is simply perfection. As an added note, the narrators for the audio book are so well suited that when I re-read the print copy of this book, I will hear their voices in the back of my mind.

A wonderfully well written, compelling first novel.

View all my reviews

Categories: Authored Inspiration, Books I Loved, Reviews | 1 Comment »

#FridayReads- January 21, 2011

This is my first time participating in #FridayReads, started by The Book Studio’s Bethanne Patrick. We talk about what we’re reading. We tag it on twitter as #FridayReads. Simple as that!

I have a few irons in the fire, as always:

The Kitchen House - I’m “reading” this via audio book. It was a slow start, but I’m becoming completely hooked by it, to the point where I will get home from work and sit in the car for another 10 minutes to get to the end of a chapter. This story is told by 2 narrators– Lavinia, who is an Irish orphan turned indentured servant, and Belle, the biracial daughter of the plantation owner. There is… so much drama in this book and I know I could read it faster than I’m listening to it, but I’m MUCH enjoying the distraction from traffic. Even if I’m just going across the street to St@rbucks, I make sure I bring the iPhone, so I can listen to a few minutes. I love historical fiction and this totally fits the bill.

Glorious- I don’t know what’s with this book. I read McFadden’s Sugar, and the follow up This Bitter Earth.  I couldn’t get into the Black Magic theme of This Bitter Earth, but it was still written leaps and bounds better than Glorious. It seems to me like this book was spat out and published, unedited, beta-ed, read for clarity…I’m reading it because  I want to know what happens in the story, but I’m disappointed in the book itself.

Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers- I’m a weirdo, and I watch a lot of shows on forensic science, investigation, things like that. CSI in its early years was a staple on my TiVO, until the stories became more about drama, less about science, and even then it was more science fiction. I watch a lot of Forensic Files, The Investigators, Dr G, Medical Examiner, simply because I am intrigued by such things. I thought I would really dig into this book and it was initially really interesting, talking about how much had changed in how doctors performed surgeries,  and then later changes in autopsy and burial. At the point I’ve reached, Roach is droning on and on about the cadavers and human lives and feelings and I find I just don’t care about who the cadavers used to be. Tell me about what the cadavers are doing now, and why, and HOW. Ugh. I’m pushing through, but slowly. I’ll give it a few more chapters before I hang it up.

What are YOU reading? Tell me (us) about it, tweet it and don’t forget to add the hashtag #FridayReads!

Categories: Authored Inspiration, Books I Hated, Books I Loved, Writers Read | Leave a Comment »

The Girl Who Fell From The Sky by Heidi W Durrow [Review]

The Girl Who Fell from the SkyThe Girl Who Fell from the Sky by Heidi Durrow

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Rachel Morse is the soul survivor of a horrific tragedy, brought from Chicago, IL to live with her grandmother and aunt in Portland Oregon. Rachel creates within her self a “new girl”… the old girl is gone, dead with the rest of her family. This new girl struggles to navigate a different life in Portland. Back home, her parents – a white Danish woman and a black soldier, never told her she was black. They never prepared her for a world where her kinky, curly hair and bright blue eyes would land her smack in the middle of two races, able to identify with neither.

The novel follows Rachel and those who are involved in her life on the periphery, like spokes on a wheel, by switching narrators. We jump in time between Rachel’s present day and the slow re-telling of the story through other voices.

I’m having a difficult time forming the words to describe my feelings on this book. It is beautifully, almost poetically written. I was deeply involved in the story and invested in each character. I started listening to the audio book in the car and it was just moving so slowly that I came home one day and bought the book so I could read the rest of it and find out what happened!

I like stories that are subtle. You don’t read what happened, you come to understand it. You don’t get a play by play, but you get enough details to know, in your heart, what’s going on. I felt that there was an effort to explain things from the mind of a young, confused girl and I was sympathetic to that.

I also felt like there wasn’t… enough story. I got to the end and thought… “erm… that’s it?” I still sort of feel like I don’t really know what happened, or why. I still have questions at the end of the book and while I don’t like endings where everything is pat and everything is tied with a big bow, I do like to have major plot lines tied up.

This is a great read, and I really enjoyed it. It just left me wanting more.

View all my reviews

Categories: Authored Inspiration, Books I Loved, Reviews, Writers Write | 1 Comment »

Columbine by Dave Cullen [Review]

ColumbineColumbine by Dave Cullen

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Dave Cullen’s Columbine is a circuitous tale through the days leading up to and following the 1999 massacre at Columbine High School. I find myself appalled and shocked and saddened at the loss of life and the immense sadness and pain of the families of the Thirteen who died as well as the survivors still fighting for life everyday.

This story holds some real life significance for me, as there are events in my past, in my family, that mirror what the Klebold and Harris families dealt with. Our pain was mirrored in theirs. Sometimes you just know, from experience, that there was nothing anyone could have done, let alone the families. People will do what they will do. I think what is most heartbreaking is that these families will never have the chance to really heal. They could never mourn. They can never participate in any “anniversaries”. They will forever be shunned and the community would never rest.

The final act of the killers was among their cruelest: they deprived the survivors of a living perpetrator. They deprived the families of a focus for their anger and their blame. There would be no cathartic trial for victims. There was no killer to rebuke in a courtroom, no judge to impose the maximum penalty. South Jeffco (Jefferson County) was seething with anger and it would be deprived of a reasonable target. Displaced anger would riddle the community for years…

What stood out to me, glaringly, was that Eric Harris was a manipulative psychopath, full and complete. Dylan wasn’t so much a follower as he was a person that wanted someone to pay attention to him. Eric fit the bill and fed his underlying rage. One of the passages that I highlighted about pair killers was that one fed off of the other. Cullen writes,

“It takes heat and cold to make a tornado. Eric craved heat but he couldn’t sustain it. Dylan was a volcano. You could never tell when he might erupt.

Together, these two cooked up the worst school shooting in history.

There is so much that we think we know about Columbine, because we kept CNN and MSNBC and local news on 24/7… and yet there is so much we did not know. Until I opened the book, I fully believed the martyr story. How disheartening to read how the actual encounter came about and how it became twisted in the media, so much so that a family profited off of a lie.

I encourage anyone who is even mildly interested in this subject to pick up this book and read it. The writing style is simple and straightforward, nothing superfluous. It is extensive and thorough and also heavily detailed. In my opinion, well done.

My only complaints were length and jarring jumps back and forth from past to the attacks to the aftermath and then back again… more history, more revealing, a blurb here and there, and then the author is a year past the attacks again and then in the next chapter he’s back to Eric and Dylan planning the attacks. I believe I would have comprehended more with a linear presentation, but that’s just me.

View all my reviews

Categories: Authored Inspiration, Reviews, Writers Read | 4 Comments »

Scrappy Theme by Caroline Moore | Copyright 2012 Melinda Jones ~ The Sweet Escape | Powered by WordPress