Giveaway: Delirious by Daniel Palmer

Yesterday, I reviewed Delirious by Daniel Palmer.  Thanks to the author, I have an extra signed copy of the ARC (Advanced Reader Copy) to give away. 

To enter, please fill out the form below.  The winner will be contacted on Friday, February 18th.  Since I will be mailing this myself, the contest is open worldwide.  Good luck to all who enter!

Posted in Bookish Chatter | 6 Comments

Review: Delirious by Daniel Palmer

  • Hardcover: 384 pages
  • Publisher:Kensington; 1 edition (February 1, 2011)
  • ISBN-10: 0758246641
  • Source:  Author
  • Charlie Giles seems to have it all.  The new digital-entertainment system for automobiles he invented is bought out by a large company.  He ousted his business partner for using company money to support his gambling addiction, so now Charlie has control over everything.  So it seems…

    One day another associate from the company reveals to Charlie that he’s about to be thrown under the bus by another employee.  Charlie’s invention, InVision, is going to be ridiculed in front of all of the company’s “big-wigs.” So Charlie devises a plan to make an (uninvited) appearance at this meeting & show up the man attempting to destroy him.  Ultimately, however, Charlie is the one that is shown up. There was no plan to destroy the reputation of his product and even worse, the employee who spoke with him doesn’t exist.

    For obvious reason’s Charlie’s alarmed. Not only because he destroyed his reputation but because he’s apparently talking to people who don’t exist, a key symptom of the disease that his brother Joe and their deadbeat father both have: schizophrenia.

    When Charlie’s coworkers become the victims of vicious murders, Charlie is the prime suspect.  Strange things begin to happen, such as incriminating notes appearing,  apparently written by Charlie himself.  Charlie, and those around him, believe he’s mentally insane and he’s forced to do whatever he can to prove his own innocence.

    Delirious is by far one of the best thrillers I’ve read in some time.  The plot is well-constructed. The action is fast-paced and exciting. The ending? Well, let’s just say I uttered a few expletives when I got to the end because I was completely & totally blown away. The reader doesn’t know who to believe, Charlie or the medical experts who surround him.  Stunned cannot begin to explain how I felt after turning the last few pages.

    The secondary characters really add to the storyline as well.  Charlie is aided by the most unlikely of characters, repairing a relationship that was long-ago destroyed.

    I think the highest compliment I can pay this book is that it kept my attention, despite only having six hours of sleep over two days.  I read it on the plane-ride home from my trip from hell.  I’m certain the other passengers assumed the expletives I was shouting were due to my frustrations with the airlines.  If only they knew!

    Daniel Palmer is the son of medical-thriller author Michael Palmer.  It’s clear that in this case, talent runs in the family!  Highly, highly recommended!

    Posted in Crime Fiction, Kensington, Mystery/Suspense, Review, Thriller | Tagged , | 9 Comments

    Review: The Devil’s Star by Jo Nesbø

    • Paperback: 464 pages
    • Publisher: Harper Paperbacks; Reprint edition (February 1, 2011)
    • ISBN-10: 0061133981
    • Source: Publisher

    Harry Hole, Oslo police detective, is called in to investigate the murder of a young woman.  Her finger was amputated and a red diamond is tucked under her eyelid.  More women are found murdered, each with a similar red diamond on the body.   Also assigned to this case is Tom Waaler, the man Harry suspected of killing Ellen Gjelten, his partner.

    To say that Harry’s life is in the dumps is an understatement. He’s become obsessed with tracking Ellen’s killer and the powers-that-be in his department threaten to terminate his employment if he doesn’t end this obsession, or provide proof of such a crime.  This obsession has also ruined his relationship with his girlfriend, Rakel.  This all leaves Harry with not much to live for, so he embarks upon a four-week drinking binge

    It’s up to Harry to decide which crime to pursue: the seemingly unsolvable murder of his partner or that of these murdered women.  No matter which path he takes is dark…the result unknown.

    This is my first experience with Nesbo’s writing and I’m astounded by the complexities of this thriller. The Devil’s Star is full of rich, extremely well detailed characters.  While this isn’t the first book in  this series, Nesbo provides an immense amount of back story.

    Harry’s character seems to grow, then fade, right before your eyes. His was one I found hard to like at times; he’s not known to follow the rules.  Frankly, I think he thrives on being an outcast.

    This book isn’t a thriller you can rush through to learn the identity of the killer.  It is one that must be savored.  The text must be absorbed, savored, and contemplated, for before you know it you will have reached the last page, desperate to start again from the beginning.

    While this is my first taste of Nesbo’s writing it most certainly it is not my last.  Highly recommended for fans of literary thrillers…and books that really make you think.

    Thank you to TLC Book Tours for granting me the ability to participate in this tour.  Be sure to check out the other stops along the way:

    Tuesday, February 1st: Jenn’s Bookshelves

    Wednesday, February 2nd: Life In Review

    Monday, February 7th: A Fanatic’s Book Blog

    Thursday, February 10th: Dolce Bellezza

    Monday, February 14th: Reviews from the Heart

    Thursday, February 17th: A Bookworm’s World

    Monday, February 21st: Life in the Thumb

    Tuesday, February 22nd: Rundpinne

    Thursday, February 24th: Man of La Book

    Monday, February 28th: Chaotic Compendiums

    Be sure to check out Jo Nesbø’s website and his Facebook page!

    Posted in Crime Fiction, Harper Collins Publishers, Mystery/Suspense, Review, Thriller | Tagged , , , | 8 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 reading, and the books to be finish this week. It was created by J.Kaye’s Book Blog, but is now being hosted by Sheila from One Person’s Journey Through a World of  Books so stop by and join in!

    Books Completed Last Week

    Despite my horrendous travel experience & nearly 30 hours spent attempting to get to a conference, I really didn’t do that much reading!

    Delirious by Daniel Palmer
    The Devil’s Star by Jo Nesbo

    Currently Reading

    The Lock Artist by Steve Hamilton (audio)

    Books to Complete This Week

    Little Princes: One Man’s Promise to Bring Home the Lost Children of Nepal by Conor Grennan

    What are you reading this week?

    Posted in It's Monday What Are you Reading This Week | 18 Comments

    TSS: Spend Superbowl Sunday Curled Up With a Good Book!

    It’s not rare for me to come up with excuses reasons to spend obscene  amounts of time reading.  With Superbowl Sunday just around the corner, I thought it would be the perfect opportunity to curl up with a good book, or two.  I’m not a huge fan of football, and while I love the commercials & the food, I’d rather be reading!

    Then, while talking on Twitter, other book bloggers  indicated an interest in participating! A read-a-thon was born!  Thanks to Florinda, we now have a fantastic name:
    The details:

    • No rules, no guidelines, just read
    • No start/end times, just read at your leisure.
    • Mini-challenges will be created to break up your reading time. Participating in these challenges is not mandatory, but you will be eligible for a number of great prizes!

    To sign up, please fill out the Mr. Linky below.  On Sunday, when you start the read-a-thon, create a start-up post & link it to the Mr. Linky I will post here on Sunday morning.

    Interested in hosting a mini-challenge or donating a prize? Email me at jennsbookshelfATgmailDOTcom.

    Mister Linky’s Magical Widgets — Auto-Linky widget will appear right here!
    This preview will disappear when the widget is displayed on your site.
    For best results, use HTML mode to edit this section of the post.

    Posted in The Big Game's On! Read-a-thon! | 25 Comments

    Interview & Giveaway: Naseem Rakha, Author of The Crying Tree

    Yesterday, I posted my review of Naseem Rakha’s The Crying Tree. Today I’m excited to present you with an interview with Naseem :

    Irene Stanley goes through a tremendous cycle of pain and grief in The Crying Tree.  You were able to capture these emotions so perfectly.  What sort of research did you do in writing this book that allowed you to capture this pain so accurately?

    It would probably be a good to say I did a great deal of research into the emotional world one enters when they lose a child, but that would not be true. My exposure to the topics in The Crying Tree, were minimal. I did cover an execution as a reporter and I have interviewed many inmates, prison officers, and staff for a variety of stories. I have also talked with crime victims about their experiences. But the real energy behind my characters’ emotions came from plumbing my own imagination and the terror, hate, pain and upheaval I know I would feel if I were to lose someone I loved to a  violent crime. My goal was to create authentic characters with struggles that felt both tangible and believable, and for me, it was best that the research came from my own soul’s voice, versus others.

    The Crying Tree was quite the emotional roller coaster of a book, very difficult for me to read at times.  How difficult was it for you to write?

    Some people are afraid of roller coasters, I find them exhilarating. I was driven to write The Crying Tree – like a locomotive without breaks. Nothing could stop me. I would wake every morning filled with ideas and inspiration. I had no idea what “writer’s block,” meant. Even in times when I felt utterly confused and baffled, I had to write. Yes, The Crying Tree has some difficult moments, but I worked hard to make sure this book was not a melodrama. I wanted to create something life giving. Odd to say for a book about murder and the death penalty, I know. But I always knew what I was aiming for and that target was to create a book that would make people want to turn around and find someone to share it with. That is what I felt like with every chapter I completed, and that is what I have heard from many readers.

    The song Silent Night plays a pretty big role in the book. Does it have a particular meaning  to you personally?

    The character of Shep, the young boy who is murdered in my novel, is a gifted musician who plays silent night every night of the year. “It is his closing piece to the end of the day, and he would either play it outside on his horn when the weather was good, or inside on the piano.” It is a famous piece, known throughout the world, and it resonates, stirring deep emotions and memories for most listeners. This was important.

    As you point out, Silent Night almost becomes a theme in my novel. Silence is one of the underlying tensions in The Crying Tree – the silence between family members, the secrets they hold and what they do to the people that hold them. And of course another theme is that of the relationship between “mother and child.” The song Silent Night, brings both of these themes into the folds of the book, while triggering personal emotional connections for most readers.

    The characters in The Crying Tree are all very complex with their own share of flaws.  Did you have inspiration for any of the characters or did they just create themselves as you wrote?

    I don’t think it is accurate to say characters create themselves, though I know that is how it is often described. Instead, I think creating characters takes hard work and persistence. It takes both halves of the brain, the right-side must bundle unlikely characteristics together, while the left side must be the objective observer, editing and managing character traits like an artistic director. My characters grew from those two halves of my brain doing twenty-four hour a day duty. If I was not actively writing about my characters, I was thinking about them, testing them, putting them in different scenarios, seeing how they reacted, and checking out their past. If I was not actively thinking about them, I was passively ruminating – day dreams in the shower, while driving, or making dinner. The characters in The Crying Tree were a product of trial and error and occasional hits of brilliance – those moments when the things that come out of the pen are not at all what you expect – but never-the-less ring true. It is from those moments, I think, that people say their characters “create themselves.” But they don’t really. They are the writer’s children, born of our own sweet, and sometimes not so sweet dreams.

    The book deals with a number of sensitive/controversial subjects.  Have you received any backlash/negative feedback based on the actions/opinions of some of the characters?

    Nothing significant.

    Music was an important element of the book.  Is music important to you, to your writing process?  If so, what sort of music do you listen to as you write?

    Music has always been important to me. It flows into my subconscious creating an emotional ambiance from which I can pull images and actions and words. I always write to music. Right now I am listening to Time Without Consequences by Alexi Murdoch. The weather outside is gray, the trees bare, the music sparse. The setting, the music, the time of day, the season, they all make me feel emotionally vulnerable, and it is from that point that I most like to write. In writing The Crying Tree, I created a specific playlist of about 60 songs – ranging from Bach to Rosanne Cash. I have a partial list of them on my website at http://naseemrakha.com/pages/links.html

    While this is your first novel, you have an extensive history in broadcast journalism.  How was writing The Crying Tree different?

    The biggest difference between being a journalist and an author is the amount of faith it takes to write a work of fiction. Unlike journalism, where the characters come already created, and the beginning, middle and end of a story is all laid out somewhere for you to find – the art of fiction requires the writer to develop all this on their own. This was a challenge for me. The uncertainty of what would happen next, how my characters would get from point A to B, how the plot would move forward through time — all this and so much more were very perplexing questions that could only be answered in one way. By writing. Every day, I had to sit down with my doubts and continue to write though them. I like to point out that to get a book of about 103,000 words I had to write about 150,000 words. The unseen scenes were created for me to better understand my characters. Writing fiction, I learned, is to walk in an unknown land, with no map and no idea what lays around the next bend. It takes faith. Journalism takes drive, focus, fast fingers, and the ability to track down the people who will later become characters of your story. Both, I might add, require good editors.

    What’s next for you? Do you have any other novels in process?

    I am working on my second novel. It is about the complexities of love and loss.

    Tell me about your writing process.  Do you have any rituals, i.e. time of day you write, certain tools you use to write?

    I write whenever and whereever I can. I tend to write on my computer, as I can get in more words per minute. I use an Apple lap top and I bring it wherever I go (including Yoga class – which upsets some. “That’s not very yoga-like,” I have been told as I type before class starts.)  I do like to get up early to write. I try not to write at night, as it is very hard for me to get to sleep if I get my characters all stirred up. I also like to write in coffee shops. Or wine bars. Or train stations. Or parks. Places I can be around people without having to be with people…. I try to leave my writing when I still have ideas in my mind. This creates momentum for when I return to the page.

    I love to see where the magic takes place.  Do you have a favorite reading/writing spot?

    Here is a photo of my kitchen writing area. A place I tend to migrate to early in the morning. The painting in the corner was done for me by local artist Ann Altman. It is on my web site. On it is my motto: “I think therefore I read. I read therefore I think.”

    Thank you, Naseem!

    I have a copy of The Crying Tree to give away to one lucky individual. To enter, please fill out the form below. Open to US & Canadian residents only, please. Winner will be contacted on Friday, February 4.

    Posted in Author Interviews | Tagged , | 8 Comments

    Review: The Crying Tree by Naseem Rakha

    • Paperback: 368 pages
    • Publisher: Broadway; 1 Reprint edition (July 6, 201
    • ISBN-10: 0767931742
    • Source: Terra Communications

    When Deputy Sheriff Nate Stanley is offered a deputy post in Oregon, he doesn’t hesitate to pack up his wife, Irene, and his children Shep & Bliss & leave behind their small, quiet Illinois town. Irene can’t help but be apprehensive, but Nate insists it is for the best. Despite Nate’s reassurances, Irene can’t help shake loose of the bad feeling she has.

    They settle in to their new home and things really do seem like they are improving. Shep, fifteen, starts exploring Oregon’s high desert  fairly regular basis.  Just when life seems to be improving for the Stanley family, tragedy strikes when Shep is shot to death in their home.  Nate discovers him but is unable to save him.

    Obviously, the family’s life is sent into a tumble. Irene, in particular, is hit very hard.  She had quite the bond with Shep and can’t seem to let him go.  Month after month, year after year, she follows the case of the man who killed her son: his trial, his death sentence, the plans for his imminent execution.

    The retribution she seeks, however, doesn’t even make a dent in the pain & desperation for closure she is seeking.  Irene makes an extremely brave decision to write her son’s killer on death row.

    “Hating you, Mr. Robbin, wanting to see you dead, and wanting to be there when it happened, has been all I’ve lived for these past years.  It was the only thing that had any meaning, and the only way I could think to serve my son.”

    And then…the ultimate, unbelievable statement:

    “I forgive you for what you did to my son.  For whatever it may be worth, I understand people make mistakes in life, Mr. Robbin, and I forgive you yours.”

    What Irene doesn’t expect is that he writes back, and thus begins a secret correspondence for years, the only thing that restores Irene’s spirit. A very unlikely friendship begins and continues for over a decade.   When Irene receives notice that her son’s killer is to be executed she is desperate to stop it.  She’s forgiven him and doesn’t want to see him die.

    This notification is the first domino, setting into motion a series of events that will forever change the Stanley family.  Irene learns she wasn’t the only one keeping a shocking secret.

    The Crying Tree
    is a powerful tale of love, friendship, & forgiveness. Rakha captures the feelings of the grieving family in a way I’ve never experienced. I constantly had to remind myself that this book was a piece of fiction, that the characters were not real.  I mourned with Irene when she lost Shep.  I sobbed for pages.  I couldn’t imagine the pain she was feeling.  When she decided to write Shep’s accused killer, I felt anger but ultimately understanding for her actions.

    The Crying Tree is an extremely exceptional read that I highly recommend.  The characters, specifically Irene, Shep, & his killer, will be in my heart and on my mind for some time, beyond the turning of the last page.

    Please be sure to check back tomorrow for an interview with Naseem Rakha & a giveaway for this tremendous book.

    Posted in General Fiction, Review, Women's Fiction | Tagged , , , | 14 Comments

    Tales of a (Formerly) Reluctant Reader: Splurch Academy for Disruptive Boys: The Rat Brain Fiasco by Julie Gardner Berry

     

    Tales of a (Formerly) Reluctant Reader is a feature in which my eleven-year-old son, John, reviews books geared toward reluctant readers. 

    • Reading level: Ages 9-12
    • Paperback: 208 pages
    • Publisher: Grosset & Dunlap (August 12, 2010)
    • ISBN-10: 0448453592
    • Source: Publisher

    Cody Mack is used to getting into trouble.  The principal’s office is his second home. This time it’s different, however.  Sitting outside the principles office while his parents are inside, Cody realizes this visit isn’t like the others.  First, this meeting is lasting much longer than most.  Second, he’s overhearing words like “remedial neuro-therapies.”

    When he is finally called into the office, he notices a tall strange man in the room.  The man, Dr. Farley, runs a special school for naughty kids.  His parents quite readily sign the forms & Cody leaves with Dr. Farley that afternoon.  When he arrives, he realizes that the Splurch Academy for Disruptive Boys isn’t your typical boarding school.  It’s hidden away in a dark & dangerous forest.  The teachers are all monsters: vampires, werewolves, and mummies.

    His first day at Splurch Academy, Cody is thrown into the the dungeon, surrounded by rats.  He soon learns of Dr. Farley’s evil plan: to swap the brains of these rats with the boys at Splurch Academy using a horrendous device called the “Rebellio-rodent Recipronator!” The “rat-boys” are then controlled using a remote control device worn by Dr. Farley.  Parents will see their “behaved” boys & Dr. Farley will be famous!  Unfortunately, Farley has met his match with Cody!

    John’s review:

    Don’t even think about misbehaving at school ever again or your principal might send you away to the Splurch Academy!  You’ll wear prison outfits, eat disgusting food and you won’t have TV or video games!

    I’m not a disruptive boy, but this book made me want to behave better so I don’t have to even worry about a punishment like this.  I think Cody deserved his punishment, but I was happy to see that he wouldn’t let Dr. Farley take control of his brain!

    One of my favorite things about this book was that it is a combination chapter book/comic book.  The comics break up the chapters, making them seem shorter.  The graphics were both funny & scary at the same time.  I really enjoyed this book and can’t wait to read the third book, which my mom says comes out next month.  Kids who like to read about monsters, but not get too scared, would really love this book.

    Jenn’s review:

    I truly enjoyed reading this series with John!  As he mentioned, the breaking up of chapters by comic panels really add to the story.  In addition, they helped keep John’s attention; not once did he ask to stop reading or complain. In addition, the chapters are quite short, just 2-3 pages long.  This helped with the pacing of the book; the short chapters kept things exciting.

    This series is the perfect one for reluctant readers, specifically boys. John & I are quite hooked on this series;we read both books in one weekend!  We’re both counting down to the release to the third book in the series, The Colossal Fossil Freakout!

    Posted in Kid-lit, Kid-Lit/Middle Grade, Review, Tales of A (Formerly) Reluctant Reader | 10 Comments

    Review: Bury Your Dead by Louise Penny

    • Hardcover: 384 pages
    • Publisher: Minotaur Books; First Edition edition (September 28, 2010)
    • ISBN-10: 0312377045
    • Source: Get Red PR

    It’s been six months since the case in the previous book The Brutal Telling was solved.  Chief Inspector Armand Gamache is still recovering, both physically & mentally, from this case, in which he arrested a his good friend & citizen of Three Pines for this heinous crime.  The guilt, the feelings of doubt, weighs more heavily than the physical.

    While on leave, visiting his mentor in Quebec City, Gamache becomes involved in a case in which a man is found dead in the Literary and Historical Society. The victim, Augustin Renaud, was known to be on an obsessive hunt for the burial ground of Quebec’s founder, Champlain.

    The new investigation doesn’t cut Gamache free of his ties to Three Pines, however.  He continues to receive pleas to reopen the case.   Gamache relives his feelings of guilt & doubt through flashbacks to this crime.

    Bury Your Dead may very well be my favorite of the sixc-books in the Inspector Gamahe series. Whereas the citizens of Three Pines were the focus of the previous books in this series, Gamache himself is clearly the center of attention in this book.  Readers see a different side of Gamache, one full of emotion, both positive & negative.

    Penny did an outstanding job of juggling/mixing the two storylines together.  While other reviews have stated the storyline was so slow-paced, I believe this pacing actually allowed the reader to become more engaged & invested in the characters & storyline.

    Fans of intense, character-driven literary suspense will be enamored by Penny’s writing.  As this is a series, I do strongly recommend starting at the beginning  & reading the series in order to fully appreciate the depth of Penny’s characters.  Highly recommended.

    Posted in Crime Fiction, Minotaur Books, Mystery/Suspense, Review, Thriller | 6 Comments

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

    a1

    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 reading, and the books to be finish this week. It was created by J.Kaye’s Book Blog, but is now being hosted by Sheila from One Person’s Journey Through a World of  Books so stop by and join in!

    Books Completed Last Week

     
    The Sentry (Joe Pike Novels) by Robert Crais
    Splurch Academy #01:Rat Brain Fiasco by Julie Gardner Berry
    Splurch Academy #02:Curse of the Bizarro Beetle by Julie Gardner Berry

    Currently Reading

    The Cypress House by Michael Koryta
    The Lock Artist by Steve Hamilton (audio)

    Books to Complete This Week

    Delirium by Lauren Oliver
    The Iron Queen (Iron Fey)by Julie Kagawa

    What are you reading this week?

    Posted in It's Monday What Are you Reading This Week | 10 Comments