Week Two Update!
Twinkies Week 1 (775.60) plus Week 2 (734.80) = running total: 1510.40
DingDongs Week 1 (794.60) plus Week 2 (838.80) = running total: 1633.40
Week Two Update!
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, so stop by and join in!
Last week was a rough week for me as far as reading goes. I started the Game On Diet and I feel most of my free time last week was spent preparing meals. Then the 4th of July rolled around, and my son’s 4th birthday, and all my free time was zapped! So, while I only completed one book, I’m close to completing a few more.
Completed Last Week
Darling Jim: A Novel by Christian Moerk (audiobook)
Currently Reading
The Poet by Michael Connelly (about 20 pages from the end. GREAT book)
Books to Read this Week
A Short History of Women: A Novel by Kate Walbert
How Perfect Is That by Sarah Bird
The Castaways by Erin Hilderbrand
The Crying Tree by Naseem Rakha
Jennifer Johnson Is Sick of Being Single by Heather McElhatton
So, what will you be reading this week?
I hope everyone is having a wonderful 4th of July! We’re having a wonderful time. Here are a few pictures from our day.

The boys can’t wait to dig in!

The complete meal: homemade macaroni and cheese, ribs, potato salad, asparagus, corn bread & apple pie. It was delicious!
Ok, I hope everyone is having a wonderful 4th! Tomorrow is my youngest son’s birthday and we’ll be spending it at the National Zoo!
Here are the rules:
I LOVE the flexibility of this challenge! You can read Austen’s books, Austen-themed books, or watch Austen movies! How easy is this!?
Since I’ve read all of Austen’s books, and viewed most of the movies, I’m picking Austen-ish books to read, and more recent Austen-ish movies.
Movies
Pride & Prejudice
The Jane Austen Book Club
Becoming Jane
It’s not about total deprivation as you get:
1) One day off a week, when you don’t have to follow any of the rules
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, so stop by and join in!
Books Read Last Week
Katka by Stephen Ross Meier
The Luxe by Anna Godbersen (audiobook)
Last Night in Montreal by Emily St. John Mandel
Currently Reading
The Poet by Michael Connelly
The Angel’s Game by Carlos Ruiz Zafon
Darling Jim: A Novel by Christian Moerk (audiobook)
Books to Complete This Week:
Sadomasochism for Accountants by Rosy Barnes
When I Forgot by Elina Hirvonen
The Second Death of Goodluck Tinubu: A Detective Kubu Mystery by Michael Stanley
The Spare Room: A Novel by Helen Garnet
What are your reading plans for this week?
Months after the deal, once Gavin that Katka hasn’t followed through with the plan, he is riddled by guilt. It was he that suggested this deal. He can’t help but think of the future they could have spent together. Gavin uses whateve means necessary and tracks down Katka’s location. Instead of living the life that was promised to her, she’s become an dancer/prostitute. She admits to Gavin why she agreed to this shift in the plan-she loved him so much she was willing to give anything for him to be relieved of the problems he was facing back in the States.
Gavin is ultimately put in the shoes of a buyer and must be willing to give anything in order to get Katka back. But what price is he willing to pay?
To be completely honest, Katka was difficult for me to get into. The sentences are choppy and the storyline jumps around from the past to the present. But once I became accustomed to this, Katka
became easier to read. It’s a very short read, barely over 100 pages. I think if the author added a bit more depth to the characters (perhaps explain a bit more about Gavin’s reason for fleeing to Prague or about the family for which Katka is desperate to provide) Katka
would have been a more engaging read. In addition, I believe changing the format so the scenes flow a little more would be beneficial as well. Overall this is a good read, but I don’t think it does the author’s talent justice in the current format.

Background on my guest reviewer: John is my 9 year old son. After several years of reading problems due to his ADD, John was a very reluctant reader. Reading was always difficult for him and whenever he was asked to read, he would get upset and shut down. Then one day, I happened to discover the Horrid Henry books. They hadn’t been released in the States yet, but I believe I found an excerpt online. I showed it to John, who showed a bit of reluctance at first. Then I read the few pages aloud to him. And he was instantly drawn in to Horrid Henry’s world! Ok, now back to John’s review!
This is my review of Horrid Horrid Henry’s Stinkbomb. Horrid Henry is rude, impolite, and thinks that the pranks he pulls are funny. He thinks only of himself. Henry has a little brother named Perfect Peter. Peter is perfect. He is very polite and isn’t selfish.
Horrid Henry’s class is going to have a reading competition. Whoever reads the most books wins a trip to a brand new amusement park. Henry gets excited when he hears this and asks if comic books count. His teacher, Miss Battle-Axe shouts “NO!” I don’t understand why comic books don’t count; they are books afterall! Oh, and they also have to write a book report for every book they read.
Henry plans to start reading as soon as he gets home. Instead, he reads comics (not allowed!), watches TV and plays a computer game. Suddenly, it is the end of the competition and Henry hasn’t read one SINGLE book! He tries to steal Perfect Peter’s books from him but can’t. He goes to his room and thinks he can just write down the names of all the books in his room, but remembers he has to write a report for all the books he reads. Miss Battle-Axe would recognize the books and would know that Henry didn’t read them. So he makes up the titles of books and adds them to his list.
The next day at school, the winner is announced. It is Clever Clare! She read 28 books! Henry is so mad! Then, Miss Battle Axe notices that Clare accidentally wrote one book down twice! There is now a tie between Clever Clare and Horrid Henry, so they both win tickets. The tickets are to Book World (this doesn’t sound like a very exciting amusement park to me, Mom, but you’d probably like it!). The story ends with Henry screaming “ARRRGGGHH!!” So, even though Henry wins the tickets, he sort of also learns a lesson about lying about the books he read. The prize is one that Clare will like because she loves books, but it’s punishment for Henry because he doesn’t like to read.
I then asked John why he liked the Horrid Henry books:
I like the Horrid Henry books because it has nice people in it as well as Horrid Henry. It reminds me of me and my little brother, Justin. (I ask, which character are you in the book? His response: I am Perfect Peter and Justin is Horrid Henry. I always act polite, and Justin is not.) I like the Horrid Henry books because they are chapter books that are easy to read. They make me laugh! And Horrid Henry does do some mean things, but at the end of each story he usually learns his lesson! I want to read the rest of the Horrid Henry books and hope my library at school will get them. I think my friends will like them too. Besides Henry and Peter, there are some other characters with funny names like Moody Margaret, Rude Ralph, and Beefy Bart. I think the names are funny but it’s good because they also describe that person!
I just want to wrap up by reiterating what John said about why the Horrid Henry books are so fabulous. Children are drawn to Horrid Henry because he is bad, but don’t think that the Horrid Henry books promote or encourage bad behavior. They don’t. Horrid Henry in some manner does get punished or suffer repercussions for his actions. In addition, the illustrations are humorous and at a level that early readers can comprehend. I found that while my son loves to read these to himself, they are best experienced if read aloud!
Thank you to Sourcebooks for providing John copies of the Horrid Henry books!