Sunday, April 25, 2010

BOOK #29

A 'loser' pilot crashes his boss' pink Gulfstream jet while having sex with a hooker. That pretty much sums up the first few pages of this book. And of course, the pink Gulfstream jet belongs to a Mary Kay type of character.

This book is a great romp of nostalgia, cults, sex, talking bats, a transvestite and organ harvests. Intrigued? You should be. Christopher Moore is one of my favorite writers. Although his last two books didn't do IT for me - I keep reading. This book was from '97 and he must have totally been in his humor groove. The two best books of his (for me) have been "Fluke or I Know Why the Winged Whale Sings (he had to have been stoned to write this one) and "Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal" (we read this in book club).

If you have a sense of humor, find some of his books and drag 'em poolside. It's rare to find him at PBS or Half Price books. You may have to buy or check out. But do it soon!

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

BOOK #28

A few years ago, the Sci-Fi Channel had a series called The Dresden Files, which I LOVED. Unfortunately, it didn't last. I still have the series and watch the eps quite often. The series was based on Jim Butcher's books of the same title.

As opposite to most people, I enjoyed the series much more than the book. But, if I hadn't seen the series, I probably would have given this book four stars instead of three. Well written, great story but I had a hard time visualizing the actual written character versus the one I was in love with from the TV series. The actual book is much more darker than the the TV series. The TV series had a bit more charm.

I have another Jim Butcher book in my pile so I'm looking forward to that one as well.

I've made a good dent in my pile of books but I have to wonder if it will ever end?

Sunday, April 18, 2010

BOOK #27


Another iPad read during my lunch hour. I enjoyed it quite a bit.

Mostly it tells you to stay away from the processed foods and sugars and eat more vegetables. Nothing really new. I have been eating salads mostly since January (with an occasional trip to The Barrel) and I do feel better. I sleep better, I have more energy. That combined with my occasional trips to the gym have made life a bit easier.

Now, if I can just stay with it. Or at least, drag my lazy ass to the gym more often....

BOOK #26

I blame my iPad for reading this book. I had to try out the reader on it, didn't I? (and it's awesome, BTW). I read this book during my lunch. Most of it made me laugh but JLH did have some excellent pointers. And I used the 'bookmarks' capability alot on this book. She happened to have some very sweet quotes about love.

Mostly, you can't give up on it.

So, I'll just keep reading about it.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

"Guilty Pleasures"


I've had this Laurell K. Hamilton book for a while and thanks to the pledge, I've read it!
(It was refreshing to put a book away in a few days too!)

I really enjoyed it. This one came out in 1993 so it's a stylistic predecessor to the current crop of vampire pulp, but this one is for grown ups.

I found it very entertaining! Just enough tough chick, vampire killer and enough male stripper/vampire sexy to be hot! Totally sexy from a woman's point of view! I'll probably read the series!

I give it an enjoyable two thumbs up!

Monday, April 12, 2010

Drood




It's finally over. Wow, that was a long book (and I've read all three LOTR books in a stretch.) I don't think they took as long.

While I thought the book was somewhat interesting, I'm not sure what tale the author was trying to tell. I thought it fell short as a mystery. It was an odd biography of Dickens (if that was the point). The only "moral" I could glean is that opiates make one hallucinate scary things. Ok, so...

The publisher and editor obviously found merit in this story that I didn't. I'm with Karen, this would have been more interesting as an 800 page book (or a 400 pager). Even so, I didn't get any tingles in my spidey-sense, so I'm giving this an "I didn't hate it, but I wasn't wow'ed" rating.

Off it goes to PBS.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

BOOK #25


Generally speaking, I've always really liked Jennifer Weiner's books. But these short stories were pretty bad. To me, they seemed like chapters in her books that didn't make the final edit. Boooo-ring.

I gave it two stars.

They can't all be great, I guess.



My stacks of books went largely ignored during the 2nd half of 2009, but I'm back in action now! After finishing the last two Outlander books last week I needed something short and sweet. A book whose pages didn't reach 4 digit numbers.

Anyhow, a friend recommended Lisa Kogan's "Someone Will Be With You Shortly" and I read it over the course of two evenings. Short, funny, and contemporary... just what I needed. Don't be scared by the fact that she writes for O Magazine...I've never read the magazine or her column but Lisa Kogan is actually funny, wry, and blunt, not at all pretentious. She shares snippets of her life as a semi-single working mom living in NYC. Sex toys, her obsession with food, pointless drag-out fights with her boyfriend, her first make-out session at the age of 13, it's all discussed in an honest and self-deprecating manner. I doubt it'll be in my top 10 reads for the year but it's still a cute read. Pick it up if you're in the mood for something light and easy!

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

BOOK #24

I couldn't help myself.

Monday, April 5, 2010

Stephanie Plum novels


I love all of the Stephanie Plum novels. It kind of seems a waste to actually buy them, as I read them in a day. She has the most entertaining family, and ends up getting into the most interesting situations. If you are looking for something light that still has a story with a twist, pick it up and give it a try.

Love some Mary Kay Andrews


Mary Kay Andrews is perfect chick lit. I fell in love with her years ago with Itty Bitty Lies, and I have never looked back. Are her books predictable? Absolutely! Are they great fun? You know it. The tough, southern girl ALWAYS triumphs over the terrible things in her life, and usually comes out with a new love. Ahhhh, if only it were so.

Saturday, April 3, 2010

BOOK #23

I think I'm the only one, in my small circle of friends, that reads these type of books. I believe in things I know nothing about but do exist in our daily lives. I like learning. Especially about things I have an interest in but don't know why.

I do believe magic exists, in one form or another, in each of our lives. And it is up to the individual to recognize and bring out their own magic in themselves and others.

This book brought me some great ideas - a few I have tried. It's really more about soul searching and asking yourself (and the universe)what you really want out of life. Answers are always there. Sometimes we just choose to ignore them. I know I do.

Some of her ideas were a little over the edge - even for me - but nonetheless, I found this book to be a pleasant 'vacation' into myself on Saturday mornings. I'll pass it on to others on PBS because everyone needs a little magick!

BOOK #22

Stephen King is my lucky charm. I have enjoyed so many new authors because of his monthly column for Entertainment Weekly. Robert Goddard was one of those recommends. Actually, it was one of Goddard's books that was his first read on the Kindle. He was batshit crazy over the guy. And after reading In Pale Batallions, I agreed with him. I am a huge fan. I was happy to find a couple more of Goddard's in my collection - I had forgotten they were in there!

Goddard has written 21 books. This was my sixth one of his. My aim is indeed to read all of them. I have to say this was the best one of his that I have read so far. I seem to have developed a liking for English fiction. I'm not sure why. I find it easy to read and it always includes that infamous dry english humor.

His books are filled with twist and turns, historical documents with that ONE clue, some romance and always a couple of murders. I read this one in about three days. I only ever put it down because I had to.

I highly recommend Robert Goddard to any one who likes to read.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Throwing up a smoke signal

I'm still here!

Holy CRAP this "Drood" book is long. I'm not sure I like it yet (after 900 pages) but I keep hoping something remarkable will happen and make me like it after all.

So far all I've determined is that Dickensian London was filthy; Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins were basically woman haters (only liked them young an cute); and Opium-addled hallucinations might be able to manifest themselves (what?!?).

I've gotten far enough through it, now, that I have about the number of pages of a normal book left. I have to see it through.

God help me...