Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Readathon Catch Up Post

Okay, so this is a little late, but better late than never, right?  The Catch Up Readathon was last week, and ending Sunday.  I'm posting late because between last and this evening I've been working, going to school, having to deal with homework and studying for tests, been traumatized by a horrific CNA at a local nursing home, and battling a sinus infection, and I still managed to lots of reading.  Because I rock. 

The Eleventh Victim by Nancy Grace

Synopsis from Barnes and Noble:
Hailey Dean is a young and tremendously successful criminal prosecutor in Georgia, equally proud of her career and her adoring fiance. But just a few weeks before the wedding, her fiance's murder and its aftermath send her into a tailspin. Grief-stricken and disillusioned with her profession, Hailey decides to leave Georgia for New York City; she hopes the change of pace and surroundings will help her heal. Transplanted to a lively, vibrant city where she has no ties and no painful reminders, Hailey embarks on a new career as a therapist. But just when she's beginning to feel settled in her new life, another tidal wave of turmoil engulfs her: Someone is murdering her patients, one by one. And the killer operates in the same way as the victims of the last case Hailey prosecuted. Clearly, Hailey hasn't left her past behind quite as well as she thought - and unless she returns to her true calling and solves the case, still more innocent people will die. Inspired by lawyer and television personality Nancy Grace's own beginnings as a prosecutor and the tragic death of her fiance, The Eleventh Victim is a compelling mystery full of intrigue that thrills from start to finish.
My Two Cents:

A really good mystery, although the main character might as well be named Nancy Grace.  The book shows the many flaws of both our judicial and political system.  It's scary because these things happen.  Next time your governor pardons someone or commutes a sentence, you might want to look into the whys of it.  Just saying... 

The Stranger Beside Me by Ann Rule

Barnes and Noble Synopsis:

The most fascinating killer in modern American history...Ann Rule has an extraordinary angle that makes The Stranger Beside Me as dramatic and chilling as a bedroom window shattering at midnight.

My Two Cents:

True crime writer and former policewoman Ann Rule was friends with Ted Bundy.  They worked together at a suicide prevention hot line. Now for those of you unfamiliar with Ted Bundy, he was a prolific serial killer, meaning he killed lots and lots of young women.  When Ann first met Ted, she was mostly writing for detective magazines.  When the killings began, she was contracted to write a book about the murders, but at the time she had no clue that man she called a friend was behind the murders and disappearances of dozens of women in Washington, Oregon, Utah and eventually Florida. I don't read a lot of true crime, although I did at one time in my teen years, but I continue to read Ann Rule books.  She is such a champion of victims, and she does her best to warn people of the dangers lurking in humanity.  As serial killers go, Ted Bundy is in a category all his own, and its fascinating to actually read a personal account from someone who was in contact with him during his early arrests, trials and escapes.  I've read this book several times in the past, and I'm sure I'll revisit it again.

The Visitor by Christopher Pike

Barnes and Noble Synopsis:

Tom was not like a normal teenager. First off, he looked weird. He was too tall, too thin, and his hair was practically white. Also, he had incredible eyes. Some thought he was from outer space. Almost everyone believed he was a nice guy. But was Tom really nice? Was he even human?
 
My Two Cents:

It's weird that that the B&N summary mentions Tom so much, he doesn't even show up until half way in the book.  The story is that of Mary and her recently dead boyfriend, Jerry.  Mary feel guilty for his death, as well she should, and can't help but feel that something  isn't quite right with her.  It's not.  There's a strange seance, some aliens and some ancient Egyptians.  I probably read this book when it first came out, but honestly I don't remember it.  I'm a huge Pike fan (in part, it's how my blog got it's name), but his books fall in to two categories: Early Pike, where maybe one or two people die but the ending is more or less happy and Later Pike, where things take a decided turn for the science fiction and happy endings are rare.  The stories are still wonderfully interesting and captivating, but I can't help but feel that someone wasn't taking their happy pills during the writing. The Visitor is a solid science fiction story, without being too complicated or over the headish.  But I'll settle for reading the Final Friend's trilogy for the umpteenth time before picking this one up again. I'm just not much of a science fiction girl, and I prefer Pike's mysteries.  I'll still continue reading his books until one of us dies though.

Odd Hours by Dean Koontz (re-read)

Barnes and Noble Summary:


Only a handful of fictional characters are recognized by first name alone. Dean Koontz’s Odd Thomas is one such literary hero who has come alive in listeners’ imaginations as he explores the greatest mysteries of this world and the next with his inimitable wit, heart, and quiet gallantry. Now Koontz follows Odd as he is irresistibly drawn onward, to a destiny he cannot imagine....
The legend began in the obscure little town of Pico Mundo. A fry cook named Odd was rumored to have the extraordinary ability to communicate with the dead. Through tragedy and triumph, exhilaration and heartbreak, word of Odd Thomas’s gifts filtered far beyond Pico Mundo, attracting unforgettable new friends - and enemies of implacable evil. With great gifts comes the responsibility to meet great challenges. But no mere human being was ever meant to face the darkness that now stalks the world - not even one as oddly special as Odd Thomas.
After grappling with the very essence of reality itself, after finding the veil separating him from his soul mate, Stormy Llewellyn, tantalizingly thin yet impenetrable, Odd longed only to return to a life of quiet anonymity with his two otherworldly sidekicks - his dog Boo and a new companion, one of the few who might rival his old pal Elvis. But a true hero, however humble, must persevere. Haunted by dreams of an all-encompassing red tide, Odd is pulled inexorably to the sea, to a small California coastal town where nothing is as it seems. Now the forces arrayed against him have both official sanction and an infinitely more sinister authority…and in this dark night of the soul, dawn will come only after the most shattering revelations of all.

My Two Cents:

I cannot state this enough: Odd Thomas is one of my favorite literary characters of all time.  There is a musicality to the voice Dean Koontz has found in my Odd one, which you can hear even if you're not listening to the audio books- which I highly recommend because the narration is wonderful!  I re-read Odd Thomas's fourth adventure for several reasons.  One, it's the only Odd book I haven't re-read and I couldn't remember it as well as the first three, and secondly because I know Dean Koontz is planning on at least 3 or 4 Odd books and Odd Hours is where you first began to see just how far a simple fry cook with one extraordinary talent must go to save the world, and thirdly because I'm anxiously awaiting the October 5th release of the newest Odd Thomas Manga, which I hope to have before Dewey's 24 readathon.  It'll be another prequel to the first book. 

Peeps by Scott Westerfeld

*Barnes and Noble Synopsis:

A year ago, Cal Thompson was a college freshman more interested in meeting girls and partying than in attending biology class. Now, after a fateful encounter with a mysterious woman named Morgan, biology has become, literally, Cal's life.
Cal was infected by a parasite that has a truly horrifying effect on its host. Cal himself is a carrier, unchanged by the parasite, but he's infected the girlfriends he's had since Morgan. All three have turned into the ravening ghouls Cal calls Peeps. The rest of us know them as vampires. It's Cal's job to hunt them down before they can create more of their kind. . . .
Bursting with the sharp intelligence and sly humor that are fast becoming his trademark, Scott Westerfeld's novel is an utterly original take on an archetype of horror.

My Two Cents:

I loved Peeps!  It gets a full Midnight rating on my scale.  Technically, I just finished the book this afternoon, so I was in the process of reading this during the catch up readathon, but you saw what kind of week I had, so how about cutting me some slack?  Peeps surprised me, fed my inner geek with lots of icky, squirmy facts about parasites, and had a fresh, male perspective in a genre heavily loaded with female main characters.  And I realized the main character was a boy immediately unlike the first chapter of some other YA book (yes, Beautiful Creatures, I'm referencing you, I liked you, I did, it just took me several beats to figure out the MC was a Pointer not a Setter (can you have parentheses inside parentheses?, the Pointer and Setters remark is from my favorite Ocean City Restaurant, Shenanigans, and is from the signs of their bathrooms ).  I plan on reading the sequel as soon as possible.

*One thing disturbing about the Peeps cover is that the boy looks a bit like the actor that plays Stefan on Vampire Diaries, so I couldn't help but picture him in my mind when I was reading.

So that's it for the Catch Up Readathon.

Right now I'm reading Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson, and it's already amazing!  And my book club read is To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee, which I'll happily be re-reading in honor of Banned Book Week. 







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Sunday, September 26, 2010

Banned Book Week


In honor of banned book week I'm reading two banned/challenged books.  First I'm re-reading To Kill a Mockingbird for my book club.



To Kill a Mockingbird is often banned or challenged for "racial slurs, profanity, and frank discussion of rape".

And then I'll be reading Speak because I've been up in arms over the various reasons people want the book banned, but I've never actually read it.  Which makes me almost as bad as those seeking to ban books without reading them... almost.  I'm really looking forward to it, and I recently read Wintergirls so I've no doubt I'll like Speak.




Most recently Speak has been challenged for language and rape, which this moron likens to soft pornography.  I hope he doesn't have any sons. He also disapproves of Slaughterhouse Five and Twenty Boy Summer.  It's like stepping into the movie Footloose, only where dancing and reading are banned and we're being asked to play the role Kevin Bacon did.  

One of the comments to his article struck a chord with me.  A commenter brought up the point that any book, taken out of context, can be viewed as dirty or offensive (Seriously, the next time you watch the movie version of the first Harry Potter, try not to dissolve into giggles during their broomstick lessons, trust me, it can not be done, gutter-minds!).

I read so called "adult fiction" when I was a kid, I was practically weened on Stephen King, and yet there was plenty of stuff that was way over my head when I first started reading, and it didn't do any permanent damage.  Hmm, I realize that's arguable, but I've yet to be court ordered to undergo a psych evaluation, so that's saying something, right?

In conclusion, piss book banning people off, read banned books.  Read banned books aloud as you're walking down the street so people will think you both crazy and offensive. Blog about your favorite banned or challenged book.  Heck, if you're more photogenic then me, Vlog about banned books.  Tell book banners to kiss your binding!

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Thursday, September 23, 2010

Friday Hopping


 It's that time of the week again, have you hopped today?

When you write reviews, do you write them as you are reading or wait until you have read the entire book?

I normally wait until I've finished reading the book, although I might on occasion mention a book I've started and how I'm feeling about it.  I find with most books you know right away if it's going to be good.  Sometimes a book surprises me, in either a good way or a bad way, and will start strong and lose my interest (Da Vinci code, this means you) or start kind of bleh and end up captivating me.  

Sometimes I want so much to love a book, either because the premise is so good, or the cover so pretty, or the title so intriguing, but let me down.  A Great and Terrible Beauty was one of those books for me.  I wanted to love it, and its sequels, but in the end I was like Randy Jackson, it was just alright for me.  It's amazing how some books you know you're going to love from the very first sentence- and those book never let you down because it's like the author wrote the book with you in mind as the sole reader.

  I personally prefer to read reviews based on the blogger's whole experience of a book- the story is a journey and I want to know if it's worth walking out the door or if I should just stay home and re-read Odd Thomas for the millionth time. 
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Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Catching Up with Readathon


 
 
 
Let my first Readathon since April commence!
 
This Fall Catch Up Readathon is hosted by http://www.thetruebookaddict.blogspot.com/ 
 
 I hope to read/finish the following books:
 
The Eleventh Victim by Nancy Grace
 
Finish re-read of Odd Hours by Dean Koontz
 
Peeps by Scott Westerfeld
 
The Visitor by Christopher Pike

Finish re-read of The Stranger Beside Me by Ann Rule



I don't know how much all this is possible, since I've started nursing assistant school recently and I attend class five days a week and I'm working Saturday-Tuesday, but I'm willing to give it a try!


Update:

Finished reading The Eleventh Victim by Nancy Grace
Finished re-read of Odd Hours by Dean Koontz
Finished re-read of The Stranger Beside Me by Ann Rule
Finished reading (possible re-read) of The Visitor by Christopher Pike
and I made it over half way into Peeps by Scott Westerfeld.

 
 
All and all not too bad considering I got a horrible cold on top on school work, tests to study for and work.


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Sunday, September 19, 2010

Need... to not read the sequels!


Need by Carrie Jones was not the book for me.  It might be the book for you, especially if you enjoy YA featuring fairies and weres.  I normally enjoy books with a touch of the paranormal, not too much into the fairy genre, but the cover of the book caught my eye and I added the book to my Book Swim pool.

Yes, I tend to judge books by their covers.  Which in this day and age of super cool images is often misleading.  Because any book can get a cool graphic artist.  You'd think I'd have learned my lesson by now, but you'd be wrong.

So Need starts off like Twilight.  Almost EXACTLY like Twilight.  The main character has a unique name (warning #1 of a Mary Sue like main character) Zara, and she's moving from sunny, warm Phoenix North (maybe South?) Carolina, to cold, freezing Forks, Washington Maine.  She's leaving her newly married newly widowed mother behind and moving in with her father grandmother who lives near some creepy woods.  Right away she meets two boys, one a hyper, handsome overachiever (think Mike Newton) and the other a broody hot boy (the Edward Cullen of the book) who drives a mini. 

The main thing that I truly enjoyed about Need is that Zara is a fan of phobias, and she starts off each chapter describing some unusual fear.  But that's the only thing I really enjoyed about Zara.  For the most part I found her annoying, but it could be that I'm 33 years old and sometimes, despite my immaturity, I'm not going to be able to relate to the main characters of YA novels. 

Zara is super involved in Amnesty International, and it is mentioned in the book CONSTANTLY, so much so that I truly felt like I was reading propaganda for the organization.  This book is brought to you by Amnesty International and Coca-Cola.  Ugh.  Not that I have anything against Amnesty International, I have even done some work on their behalf, but I felt like the author used it to show what a sensitive, caring person Zara is.  Got it, now can we move on?

Zara also does a LOT of dumb, horror movie things.  She's seeing some stalker dude everywhere she goes, she hears her name being called from the woods, teens are going missing again, and she's been warned to stay away from the woods.  So of course she goes outside to walk in the woods at every given moment.

And while I'm not one to usually figure out where a book is going, I knew exactly what was happening and who was involved almost from the beginning. 

Was the writing bad?  No.  Was the story original?  Um, parts were- but again I don't read much fairy books (except for the awesome Good Fairies of New York by Martin Millar which I love a million red m&ms).  It's just that I could have put the book down at any time and not regretted doing so.  But I finished it because a book has to be unreadable for me to give it up.  It's my own little quirk of reading OCD.

Need has the obligatory love triangle, but you'll never feel torn, Nick and Ian will not divide loyalites like Edward and Jacob or Peeta and Gale.  But seriously, what girl doesn't want at least 2 hotties to choose from?  Or to be like Sookie Stackhouse and have every hot guy in a billion mile radius attracted to you?

I'm giving Need a Midnight Book Rating of 6pm, reading it during dinner won't spoil your appetite, but it's not going to keep you up to the wee hours of the morning. Need does have some interesting mythology to it, so I really do think those of you who enjoy paranormal romances will like this, it just wasn't a compelling read to me.

The cover of the book gets a 11pm rating.  :)



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Friday, September 17, 2010

I'm Baaack! Thanks to Dewey and Readathon.


Not that I was ever really away, but my focus was on other things.  My weight loss journey is going well, but it's a long one and I've decided that I have time to blog about both.  Which is crazy, since I just started an intense 6 week course to be come a CNA (or nurse assistant depending on what you prefer to call it).  But I totally aced my first test today, so I'm feeling confident.  The book club I started months ago is flourishing, and I'm having a blast reading book after book.

The main reason I'm reason I'm back is that the next Readathon is October 9th.  For those of you who may not know, Dewey was an amazing book blogger who hosted the very first 24hr readathon and started a tradition of the best 48hrs you could spend in a year (there's a readathon in October and April).  Sadly, Dewey is no longer among us.  I actually never even knew her.  I was working on some project, looking for book related activities when I stumbled upon her readathon.  At the time I had no clue what it was, other than the fact that it sounded like fun, and I had no idea about book blogging at all.

But I book marked the link and the site stayed in my mind.

I started my book blog around this time last year, excited to have re-discovered the Readathon site- which is what spurred me to start this crazy blog.  The realization that I missed out on knowing Dewey saddened me, but I love that in such a short time in the blogasphere she made such a lasting impression.  What a beautiful legacy to leave behind. And for those bloggers that continue in her name I have only the highest respect and gratitude.  The readathon is a super fun event for us readers, but there's so much work behind the scenes to make it happen.  Thank you all, and thanks to the cheerleaders who keep us readers awake and motivated.

I'll post my picture of my pile of books soon, but until then, what are you planning on reading?  I have some spooky tales to get me in the Halloween spirit! And even though I have plenty of books to get me thru the next 50 readathons, I'm always looking for that perfect read.    Anything suggestions?





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