Dewey’s 24-Hour Readathon: April 2012 Edition

Today I’ve taken the day off to prep for the 24 Hour readathon tomorrow. Clean house, run errands, stock up on snacks, etc.  I’m really looking forward to this readathon! My oldest son is heading off to camp with his Boy Scout troop so I’m down one child.  I’m not sure if this means I’ll have more time to read or less time 🙂

I’m trying to recall how many of these readathons I’ve participated in and I believe this will be my sixth. Lessons learned include picking books that aren’t too heavy in subject matter and aren’t too long.  Graphic novels are a great way to break up monotony of reading straight text.

Comfortable clothes is another must! My readathon attire shall be my “I’ve Read Books” t-shirt and a comfortable pair of lounge pants.

Yet another must-have is perfect snacks! Here’s what I have lined up:

  • raw veggies (carrots, broccoli, celery)
  • trail mix
  • Cheese & crackers
  • grapes
  • mini tacos
  • pizza rolls
  • Cookies (for baking at 2 am)
  • Cinnamon rolls (easy breakfast for Sunday morning)

I’ve just started putting together a list of the books I’d like to read this weekend. No promises; I may change my mind an hour in! Here’s my list so far:

Afterwards by Rosamund Lupton
The Thirteenth Sacrifice by Debbie Viguie
Midnight in Peking: How the Murder of a Young Englishwoman Haunted the Last Days of Old China by Paul French

Additionally, I’m thinking a reread of Mira Grant’s NEWSFLESH series is in order since the newest book, Blackout, is due out next month.

So….this is as far as the list planning goes. Last readathon, I just picked random books of my shelf and that seemed to work the best.

Ok, I’m off to finish a book. I have this thing about starting the readathon fresh!

Are you planning on participating in the readathon? What books do you have lined up?

Posted in Dewey's 24 Hour Read-a-thon | 3 Comments

Review: The Iguana Tree by Michel Stone

  • Hardcover: 220 pages
  • Publisher: Hub City Press (March 1, 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 189188588X

Hector, in an attempt to provide a better life for his wife, Lilia, and infant daughter, pays a coyote to transport him to the United States from Mexico.  The journey is long and perilous; dozens of men are stacked like sardines in the false-bottom of a toy truck. Upon arrival, he secures a job in South Carolina on a tree farm and begins to save money so that he might transport his family to the States to join him. He’s quite fortunate to have found this family, Lucas and Elizabeth. They are sympathetic to the issues he’s dealing with, and quickly a bond forms.

Meanwhile, back in Mexico, Lilia struggles without Hector.  When reasons keeping her from leaving Mexico disappear, Lilia takes matters into her own hands and secures her own transport to the States. In her mind, taking upon this decision, this journey, will prove to Hector how much she loves him.

The transport Lilia uses to freedom is quite different than Hector’s. Forced to repay her coyote in the most terrifying and traumatic of means, she’s witness to a host of violence among the smugglers. In addition, she’s forced to hand her daughter over to a stranger, with the promise that she will be returned to her within hours of her arrival in the States.

Upon arrival, Lilia’s daughter is  no where to be found, the woman who assured her safety is missing. When reunited with Hector, he is furious with her for exposing herself and their only child to danger. Hector doesn’t understand Lilia’s reasoning for going against his plan; in his eyes it is a sign of disrespect and lack of trust. The entire ordeal puts a great strain on their marriage; was it all worth it?

We’ve all witnessed the struggle with illegal immigration, but it’s not often that we get a glimpse of the other side. The story of Hector and Lilia is a truly emotional one, and one that is not unique. Their journey of hope and suffering pulls at your heartstrings; one can’t help but root for this couple in their struggle for ultimate happiness. While the ending is left open, I can’t help but believe they are able to attain this joy they risked so much to obtain.

Stone’s writing is elegant and the story well-crafted. While it is a short read at just over 200 pages, it is a story that will linger with you. I truly felt as though the characters were real and I’m desperately hoping that Stone writes more about them.

Bottom line: this is a book that will, without a doubt, join several other great books as a favorite of this year. Read it, recommend it. You won’t regret it. Highly recommended.

 

Posted in Hub City Press, Literary Fiction, Review | Tagged , | 7 Comments

Review: White Horse by Alex Adams

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Atria/Emily Bestler Books (April 17, 2012)
  • ISBN-10: 1451642997
  • Source: Publisher

Thirty-year-old Zoe Marshall work as a janitor for Pope Pharmaceuticals. One day, she returns home to find a jar sitting in her apartment. The source of the jar is unknown. It becomes an obsession for Zoe and a topic of frequent discussion with her psychologist. She takes the jar to a museum curator for investigation.

Meanwhile, a virus is raging her town. The symptoms are similar to a stomach virus. Soon, everyone in her apartment building who also happens to own a cat is sick and eventually dies. The virus quickly spreads, dubbed the White Horse by a televangelist after one of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. Ninety percent of the population is killed by the virus; Zoe is one of those individuals who appears to be immune. Others who are found to be immune form mutations, like gills, tails, snakes growing from their heads like hair.

When it becomes obvious that everyone she loves around her has died, Zoe embarks upon a mission to find her new love, Nick, her psychologist. Nick left just as the virus was starting to spread; he felt what he thought were symptoms and disappears, heading to Greece to find out if his parents are still alive.  When Zoe finds out she is pregnant, her mission becomes more dire and urgent. Along the way, she meets several unique characters, including a man only referred to as “the Swiss,” a man set on destroying the abominations created by the virus, including Zoe’s unborn child. The reader follows Zoe on her journey, the storyline alternating between past and present.  Zoe, a woman once sheltered by the bubble of family and friends surrounding her, must branch out, escape everything that is comfortable to her, in order to survive.

Zoe’s character is quite a strong one. It was thrilling to watch her evolution as an individual, starting out as a meek woman during her therapy sessions with Nick to a strong, courageous individual.  She was a truly good and pure character, very apparent as compared to those individuals who were dark and evil. As she travels on her journey, she can’t help but reflect upon herself as an individual and on humanity as a whole.

While the storyline does alternate between past and present, I didn’t feel as though this took away from the overall story or was confusing. Each heading is broken up into “Now” and “Then,” making it easy for the reader to discern the timing.

Due to its subject matter, White Horse is not a light book in any manner. I found it quite reminiscent to the disparity and desperation of The Road by Cormac McCarthy. There is quite a bit of retelling of the devastation suffered by the victims, and survivors, of White Horse. That said, there is quite a bit of hope scattered throughout, lightening the mood just a bit.

White Horse is the first in an apocalyptic trilogy. I’m impatiently waiting for the next volume. The intensity of this novel carries, unrelenting, throughout the entirety of the novel, the last few lines leaving me breathless.  Adams’ writing is unique, so powerful in its simplicity at times, yet overflowing with meaning at others. This is a tremendous debut, one I recommend highly.

 

Posted in Atria, Dystopian fiction, Emily Bestler Books, Thriller | 3 Comments

Review: The Inquisitor’s Key by Jefferson Bass

  • Hardcover: 368 pages
  • Publisher: William Morrow (May 8, 2012)
  • ISBN-10: 006180679X
  • Source: Author

In the seventh volume of the Body Farm series, forensic investigator Dr. Bill Brockton leaves the body farm-an outdoor enclosure that studies various levels of body decay-to join his protege, Miranda Lovelady, in Avignon, France. Miranda is spending the summer there excavating a newly discovered chamber in the Palace of the Popes.  It is there she discovers a stone chest inscribed with the crest of Jesus of Nazareth. Could the bones found inside possibly be the remains of Christ himself?  Once the bones are discovered, she calls upon Brockton to help her prove, or disprove, their identity. Both Miranda and Brockton are quite skeptical; ebay is full of fake relics of this time period. But when laboratory tests reveal the bones are two thousand years old, they are confronted with a battle between the Vatican, other anthropologists, and a radical who intends to use the remains to bring upon the Second Coming and ultimately, the end of the world. While investigating this case, Brockton must avoid abduction and assassination attempts, keeping himself free of danger while working on the case of the century.

I’ve been a long time fan of this series, sparked by my study of forensics and criminal justice in college. It was quite rewarding to be reunited with Brockton in a completely new setting: France. Whereas previous books in this series were more focused on domestic cases, this international setting added a completely new element to this series.  Religion, and art history play a key role in this novel. Admittedly, I was a bit wary when I read the summary: Brockton discovering the bones of Jesus Christ. It seems that quite a few not so good books with similar subject matters have been released over the years and I was afraid my reverence and respect for the two authors that make up the Jefferson Bass name might be forever tainted.  In actuality, the reverse happened: I gained new respect for Dr. Bill Bass and Jon Jefferson.  Dare I say this novel is my favorite of the series? The fact that this dynamic writing duo was able to take on such a controversial subject matter with such zeal and skill really raised the level of respect I have for these two individuals.

While I stated that this is the seventh book in a series, readers new to these authors can easily pick it up and treat it as a stand-alone. That’s not to say that I don’t recommend you read the entire series, I definitely do. Long-time fans of the Body Farm novels will too be impressed with this novel for we are allowed to get a glimpse of continuing evolution of the relationship between Brockton & Miranda.

Bottom line: If you like the television series Bones, have any interest in forensic investigation, this is the series for you. Highly, highly recommended!

Check out Janice Bashman’s guest post with the authors here!

Additionally, there are a whole host of posts going up to celebrate the release of this novel. Check out the list here.

Posted in Crime Fiction, Review, Thriller, William Morrow | Tagged , , , , , , | 6 Comments

It’s Monday! What Are You Reading This Week?

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It’s Monday! What Are You Reading This Week? This is a weekly event to list the books completed last week, the books currently being read, and the books to be finish this week. It is hosted by Sheila from One Person’s Journey Through a World of  Books so stop by and join in!

Books Completed Last Week

Thanks to a weekend spent traveling for work, I had quite the productive reading week last week!

The Rook
(audio)
Assassin’s Code: A Joe Ledger Novel (review)
White Horse by Alex Adams
A Land More Kind Than Home by Wiley Cash
This Life Is in Your Hands: One Dream, Sixty Acres, and a Family’s Heartbreak (P.S.) by Melissa Coleman (review)
The Lifeboat by Charlotte Rogan  (review)


Currently Reading

The Inquisitor’s Key: A Body Farm Novel by Jefferson Bass
The Inquisitor by Mark Allen Smith

Books to Complete This Week

This doesn’t include the books I plan to read during the 24 Hour Readathon…those have yet to be determined!

Dirt by David Vann
Red, White, and Blood (Nathaniel Cade #3) by Christopher Farnsworth
The Iguana Tree by Michel Stone

What are you reading this week?

Posted in It's Monday What Are you Reading This Week | 6 Comments

TSS: On The Road Again!

This weekend I’m in Syracuse, NY for a work-related meeting.   Traveling is exhausting, but a definite bonus is quality reading time during the hours spent on a plane and in an airport.

Prior to heading to Syracuse, I attended quite an interesting event at my indie bookstore, One More Page Books.  Kayt Sukel, author of Dirty Minds: How Our Brains Influence Love, Sex and Relationships led a discussion of love as an addiction much like drugs, alcohol, etc. Sukel did a tremendous amount of scientific research to find out why we do what we do when we’re in love. With my background in psychology/sociology, I’m a nerd when it comes to data regarding human behavior. I can’t wait to dive into this book!

I’ve been on quite a roll with truly outstanding books lately. Here’s just a glimpse of what I reviewed last week:

Additionally, I’m quite excited to be participated in World Book Night on Monday, April 23rd. I will be distributing Stephen King’s The Stand my favorite book of all time. I’m excited to be participating in such a great event!

Also, next weekend I’m participating in Dewey’s 24 Hour Readathon. Not to worry, you aren’t required to read a full 24 hours. I typically read 18 hours or so. Next weekend my son has both a soccer game and a Tae Kwon Do belt ceremony, so I’ll be taking frequent breaks!

Work is calling me so I must keep this short. I hope everyone had a great weekending week!

 

 

 

Posted in The Sunday Salon | 4 Comments

Review: Assassin’s Code by Jonathan Maberry

  • Paperback: 432 pages
  • Publisher: St. Martin’s Griffin (April 10, 2012)
  • ISBN-10: 0312552203
  • Source: Publisher

U.S. Department of Military Sciences Captain Joe Ledger and the Echo Team have been sent to Iran to rescue a group of American students held hostage. As the team ushers the students out of the country, Ledger learns of a number of nuclear bombs supposedly planted in oil fields across the Mideast. Ledger and his team are forced to race the clock, desperate to find these bombs before nuclear holocaust is unleashed. As always seems to be the issue with any case involving the Echo Team, the mission isn’t as simple as first perceived. Joe and his team learn of a group of genetically altered killers, a brotherhood that is centuries old, known to have been responsible for the brutal rape and killing of young women, all for the sake of securing the future of  their lineage.

This news throws Ledger’s world view for a spin. As with previous books in this series, the reader is given a unique look inside the mind of Joe Ledger. He battles against three personalities buried within his mind (the modern man, the cop, and the warrior), desperate to maintain his sanity, and his soul, while fighting against some of the most brutal creatures the world doesn’t even know exist.

Aiding him in this case is a mysterious assassin, known to Ledger only as Violin. Normally she and Ledger would be sworn enemies, but their shared interest in putting an end to this hidden, evil war forces them to work together. It’s obvious that Violin has a personal interest in these creatures, just how personal is unknown until the very end.

Those wary of yet another vampire novel shouldn’t worry, for Maberry creates a league of vampires unlike no other, their existence is scientific, not supernatural.

One of the many things Maberry thrives at is rich characters. I was excited (okay, giddy) to see some of the past villains return, bigger and badder (if that is possible) than before. Additionally, the cast of the Echo Team return, this time with a few more members. I’d be remiss not to mention Ghost, Ledger’s dog and sidekick, who plays a particularly important role in this novel. Additionally, Maberry excels at providing a novel rich with action and intensity. This pacing continues throughout the entirety of the novel, unrelenting.

As this is one of a series of books in the Ledger series, while it can be read as a stand-alone I do encourage you to read the others in this series (Patient Zero, Dragon Factory and King of Plagues) so you are able to get a true sense of the evolution of Ledger’s character.

I should note that this is the first of the Ledger series that I have read in print as I listened to the audio book versions of the other three. That said, while I did enjoy reading Assassin’s Code I did miss Ray Porter’s narration of the story. I definitely plan on listening to audio book when it becomes available. Porter is Joe Ledger, no doubt in my mind.

Bottom line: Assassin’s Code continues my belief that Maberry is the king of horror/thriller novels. From zombies to genetic monsters and vampires, Maberry just goes to prove that monsters we (okay, I) grew up reading about aren’t always as they seem. He’s talented enough to put a completely unique spin on this horrible creatures, portraying them in a light never imagined. Highly recommended.

Posted in Horror, Paranormal Fiction, Review, St. Martin's Griffin, Thriller | 4 Comments

Review: This Life Is In Your Hands by Melissa Coleman

  • Paperback: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Harper Perennial; Reprint edition (April 10, 2012)
  • ISBN-10: 0061958336
  • Source: Publisher

In the late 1960s, Melissa Coleman’s parents, Eliot and Sue, gave up their life in regular society to move to a rural rugged coastland in Maine. They purchased 60 acres of land, planning to exist solely on the crops they grew. They were inspired by Helen and Scott Nearing, authors  of Living the Good Life, a couple well known as proponents of living off the land. Coleman’s parents literally lived off of what they established themselves, including a wood cabin they built from hand, devoid of the conveniences of plumbing, electricity, etc. It was here they raised Melissa and her two sisters.

Melissa was born within months of this move to the rural life. She wasn’t raised as many children were, instead of close friends she relied on farm animals around her to keep her company. It wasn’t too long before she was graced with a younger sister to keep her company in the open expanse of nature around her. For the sake of living off of nature, her parents swore off common practices, including prenatal care, childhood vaccinations, and the like.

This life her parents established for them was not an easy one. Her father worked endlessly to produce crops that, in turn, her mother diligently prepared for storage in their food cellar. Her father became obsessed with providing for his family. Unfortunately, the perfect simple life they craved for wasn’t the life they obtained. Soon the media learned of this family’s farming movement, and the idyllic life they craved to create began to crumble. When a horrific tragedy befalls the family, this facade of a happy life the family created began to fall apart. Instances of mental instability in Melissa’s mother became more prevalent, “checking out” when things got too rough. The patriarch of the family, the proponent behind this movement, begins to falter in his passion and his dedication to his family. By the fall of 1978, this life they created together, out of their own sweat and tears, is nonexistent.

This Life Is in Your Hands: One Dream, Sixty Acres, and a Family’s Heartbreak is Melissa’s own account of life growing up in a homestead family. Oftentimes, I found myself forgetting that it was her own life she was reliving, for the emotion usually associated with this sort of retelling was absent. I saw this as a clear indication of the sort of family she grew up in, a family more focused on nurturing the land than the members of the family itself.

Knowing from the premise of the book of the sort of tragedy that would befall the family, I became frustrated when it wasn’t brought up until the last 1/3 of the book. That said, the story Coleman portrays is an incredibly inspirational, yet also devastating, book. I was rooting for the family, so set on providing a good life for their children. As I watched the structure, the backbone of the family start to crumble, I was devastated. I wanted the Coleman family to thrive, to prove all those who doubted them that they could seek everything they needed from the land around them.

In today’s society, when we rely so much on technology to exist, I believe it is important to look back at what life was like without these materialistic items.  Coleman’s memoir gives us a glimpse of this simpler life, a life not too far in the past. Highly recommended.

Thank you to TLC Book Tours for providing me the opportunity to review this book. Please be sure to check out the tour page for additional stops in this tour.

Posted in Harper Books, Memoir, Non-Fiction, Review | 8 Comments

Review: The Lifeboat by Charlotte Rogan

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Reagan Arthur Books; 1 edition (April 3, 2012)
  • ISBN-10: 0316185906
  • Source: Publisher (Netgalley)

It’s 1914. The Empress Alexandra, bound for New York, suffers a fire on deck and the passengers are forced to flee the ship, five days out of Liverpool.  Some survivors make it on board lifeboats. The sinking of the Titanic two years prior is fresh on the passenger’s minds.

Grace is a newlywed, traveling to New York with her husband, Henry, a banker. Grace is one of the survivors that is able to find space on a lifeboat among several other passengers. Their boat is “captained” by Hardie, a crew member from the Empress Alexandra. He’s their savior, sharing his nautical skills as a means of insuring their survival. He’s able to catch fish to nourish them, collect rainwater to quench their thirst.

It’s not long before they all realize their lifeboat is severely overloaded. Adjustments made to the size and structure of the lifeboat aren’t reflected in the passenger capacity sign; apparently a shortage in the ship’s owner’s budget prevented him from reprinting the signs. Additionally, a whole in the lifeboat requires the passengers to bail water constantly. The survival of the entire group is at risk; someone needs to sacrifice their own life to save those of all the others. Soon alliances are formed, survivors plotting against one another, bound to survive this incredibly traumatic voyage.

The Lifeboat is a narrative of Grace’s experience on the nearly three weeks spent languishing on the lifeboat. Grace is determined to survive, refusing to succumb to the death and dismay surrounding her. She retells the power struggle between Hardie and other survivors, of the act performed by some of the survivors, including herself, all in the name of safety and preservation of life for those on the lifeboat.

Grace’s narration alternates between past and present, between her experience on the lifeboat and her relationship/courtship with her husband, Henry, now presumed dead. Grace is a neutral character, in my mind: a character that I don’t necessarily root for but on the hand do not despise. To me, due to the circumstances, her narration and viewpoint are unreliable.  Her retelling of the saga comes from a journal. A journal that doesn’t exactly mesh with the actual events that transpire during the journey. Knowing that she may face repercussions for the act she performs on the lifeboat, I can’t help but wonder how truthful her retellings were. The atmosphere on the lifeboat was quite hostile from the beginning; several of the other survivors commenting that Grace’s position on the lifeboat was bought by her wealthy husband. She didn’t “deserve” the spot she now held; instead it should have gone to another passenger.  As the novel progresses, we witness just how manipulative Grace can be. It becomes obvious that she puts her own survival and desires above all others.

The Lifeboat is, at its core, a story of survival. Several issues of morality come in to play making this the perfect book for discussion. Rogan paints a setting so vivid and realistic, one can’t help but imagining themselves as a passenger on the lifeboat. Additionally, you’ll find yourself pondering what you would have done in their place.  Would you have risked your life for the sake of others? Or would you have taken some other individual’s life in your own hands?  These questions continued to pervade my thoughts days after completing this book. Highly recommended.

Rogan’s own story, her path to publication, is an inspirational one. She wrote this novel in secret, hiding it from her friends and even her husband. The inspiration for this novel came from a case in her husband’s criminal law texts, Queen v. Dudley and Stephens. In this case, two shipwrecked individuals kill and consume another castaway. While there is no cannibalism in The Lifeboat, it does explore some of the same issues of this case.

Be sure to check out the author’s web site for additional multimedia information on the book.

Posted in Literary Fiction, Mystery/Suspense, Reagan Arthur Books, Review | 14 Comments

It’s Monday! What Are You Reading This Week?

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It’s Monday! What Are You Reading This Week? This is a weekly event to list the books completed last week, the books currently being read, and the books to be finish this week. It is hosted by Sheila from One Person’s Journey Through a World of  Books so stop by and join in!

Books Completed Last Week

Despite plans to get some quality reading done this weekend, I failed. My seasonal allergies have been so bad, my eyes aren’t able to focus on print. Hoping to try again today.

The Song Remains the Same by Allison Winn Scotch (review)

Currently Reading

The Rook (audio)
Assassin’s Code: A Joe Ledger Novel
The Lifeboat by Charlotte Rogan

Books to Complete This Week

A Land More Kind Than Home by Wiley Cash
This Life Is in Your Hands: One Dream, Sixty Acres, and a Family’s Heartbreak (P.S.) by Melissa Coleman

What are you reading this week?

Posted in It's Monday What Are you Reading This Week | 11 Comments