Showing posts with label book reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book reviews. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

~summer reading suggestions~

Reading is a passion of mine and on a 
good week I read about 2 books.
In the summertime my favorite reading
spot moves from the bathtub to the 
lounge chair on my shaded deck.
Pure bliss.
Throw in an iced coffee and I'm in heaven.
 
If you like to read and want a couple
good book suggestions then read on.
You can click on any of the pictures to
be directed to Amazon.
 
The first one is "Hitmaker" 
by Tommy Mottola
 I really enjoy reading biographies, historical
pieces and memoirs. This book falls into all
those categories. For you music lovers out there
I highly recommend this book. Tommy Mottola is
the man behind many successful musicians
including; Hall & Oates, Bruce Springsteen,
Mariah Carey, Celine Dion, Gloria Estefan,
J-Lo.....the list goes on and on.
This is his story and point of view to how
he helped build SONY records into the mega hit
company it is. Along the way you get to read
fun stories behind some of the greatest hit songs
and the artists who performed them. What I 
found most interesting about this book
was the progression of the music industry and
how it has changed since the 1970's because
of technology. It's obvious reading it that
the author has a large ego but I don't think
his success would have been possible without
that ego and mindset. Regardless of your
feelings toward the author, the book is a 
great piece of historical documentation about
the music industry. 
 
The next book is "The Silver Linings Playbook"
by Matthew Quick
 I bought this book on my Nook because I 
recalled the movie was recently nominated
and even received Oscars. I had no
idea whatsoever as to what the storyline was about.
 
In a nutshell....it's about mental illness;
A fictional story told from the view point of
a man who has just returned home from a 
mental hospital. He has no memory of how
long he was there or why he was there. 
The story is a journey into his finding the 
future thru remembering his past. 
Along the way he is helped by a woman 
who also suffers from mental illness.
Although the story doesn't plunge into the 
dark abyss that the topic of mental illness often 
guides us to....it still teeters on the heavy
and dark side. For those of you who
prefer to read heavier stuff.....this is for you.

The next one is "The Healing"
by Jonathan Odell.
I thoroughly enjoyed this story;
A fictional story about a baby who is ripped from her
slave mother's arms in order to be raised
 by the emotionally stricken lady of the house after her own daughter tragically dies. 
I love stories that cover more than one generation
and show us the unseen connections 
from generation to generation.
This book does specifically that. 
It starts off with the main character as an 
old woman. She is what many would term a "witch Dr." or "natural healer". A young child that needs 
healing comes into her life tragically and suddenly.
From there, she starts telling the child the
story of her life, as a way to help the child heal
her hurting heart. While telling her stories,
the main character (wish I could remember her name) 
helps to heal her own hurts and discovers 
her roots and how this child's roots are
intertwined with her own.

This was an exceptional story and is now
in my top ten favorite books. I highly 
recommend this book.

The next book is "Until I Say Goodbye"
by Susan Spencer-Wendel
A beautiful memoir of Susan's determination
to live her life with joy after receiving 
the terminal diagnosis of ALS (Lou Gehrig's Disease).
This book jumped out at me when I was shopping
for a book on my Nook because my dear
Grandma died of ALS 9 years ago. 
Reading about her struggle as the symptoms 
got worse brought up many memories
for me about my Grandma as her symptoms 
progressed. 
 
Despite the subject matter of 
this book, it manages to not get too heavy
and emotionally sappy. It's the perfect 
combination of heartfelt, funny, profound and simple.
I was highlighting and noting phrases in this 
book like crazy.  Susan is a journalist who
was diagnosed with ALS at the age of 42.
For those of you not familiar with ALS,
it is a terminal disease. A disease in which 
you eventually lose any function in your body
that requires muscle. It works it's way up from your 
toes and eventually paralyzes your ability to
move, swallow, chew, talk and eventually breath. 
It's a sad progressive disease and it's 
devastating to watch it happen to a person.
 
In spite of all this, she commits to live a life
with joy by planning vacations specifically for
each person in her life that she loves....
each of her 3 kids, her husband, her best friend,
her sister, etc. She does this in the hopes that
she can plant a seed in each of her children 
that will remind them to live with joy
even if she is not with them physically.
She is a beautiful writer and has such an easy
style of writing. The story is packed with 
so many profound and beautiful analogies 
about life. It's also filled with many
laughs. This is another book I 
highly recommend.
 
The last book is "Sarah's Key"
by Tatiana DeRosnay
A friend recommended this to me and I 
was able to purchase it on my Nook for
a good price. I would call this historical fiction. 
 
It's a story that takes place in modern day France
about a reporter who is writing an article about
the roundup of French Jews back in 1942.
Through her research, she soon discovers her
life is intertwined with a young French girl's
who was a victim to this injustice.  
The girl's name was Sarah.
Back in 1942 when the French police raided
her home to take them away, she hid her 
4 year old brother in a secret cupboard, 
thinking she would be back later that day
to let him out. Sarah carries the key to this cupboard 
with her for her entire life. As the story is told you
find out the fate of Sarah and her family
and realize the connection this story has
with the journalist.
 For those of you who enjoy historical fiction.....
this is top notch!
 
I hope you enjoy your summer reading
as much as I do. If you have any good books
to recommend let me know. I'm always up
for a good read. 
 
 
 

Friday, October 12, 2012

~11-22-63 book review~

I'm not usually a Stephen King fan.
I DON'T do scary and I DON'T do gory;
two things I automatically assume a Stephen King
story entails. I've read many books over the years
about the JFK assassination, covering all the 
different conspiracy theories, the Warren Commission
reports, Lee Harvey Oswald, etc. 
BUT.....I have never read one like this.

Let me give the disclaimer here that I'm usually
not into science fiction....AT ALL.
This book has a little science fiction in the sense that
the main character finds a portal that allows him
to go back in time. When he enters this portal
he is transported to a September day in 1958.
No matter how many time he enters the portal,
he is always transported to that same day, same
time in September of 1958. Here's the weird part,
regardless of the amount of time he spends in 
the portal, when he comes back to modern day
time, he has only been gone 2 minutes.
Crazy isn't it?

The whole premise of the story once he discovers this
time portal is to go back in time and stop the 
Kennedy assassination. In order to do so, he
has to stay for 5 years, awaiting the date of
the Kennedy assassination, November 22, 1963.
During the 5 years leading up to it, he lives
 life and learns quickly the concept of 
the "butterfly effect".......
how a small change in events can effect
the big picture on a HUGE level. 
I got so involved with the characters and their
stories that I forgot completely about the 
science fiction aspect of it. 

The story is brilliantly told and full of
surprises, colorful characters, suspense,
brain bender concepts and a 
CRAZY UNEXPECTED ending!
And true to form with any Stephen King story....
it has it's fair share of creepiness but in
this particular book it delivers without
going overboard.

I thoroughly enjoyed this read.....
all 849 pages of it.

Monday, May 7, 2012

~book review-The Language of Flowers~

The Language of Flowers
by Vanessa Diffenbaugh

Not since I read "A Vintage Affair", have I enjoyed
a book so much. Simply put, this is a beautiful story
of self-forgiveness and maternal love told thru
the meaning of flowers. If you love flowers and
good stories, this book is for you.
Mom-you will love it. 

The main character is Victoria Jones who has
grown up in the foster system and is unable to get
close to anybody. Her only emotional connection
and expression to the world is thru flowers and
their meanings. The story begins the morning of
her 18th birthday, the day she is going to be
emancipated from the system. With no job, no
family and nowhere to go, she starts sleeping
in a public park where she plants a garden.
A local florist gives her a job and Victoria soon 
learns that she has a special gift of helping others
thru flowers.  As she is forced to confront
issues and people of her past she soon learns
that the person she needs to heal most is
HERSELF. 

Back in the Victorian Era, people would
communicate and send messages to one another
thru flowers. (That's much better than texting
if you ask me.) I never knew flowers 
had such a history of meaning so much. 
At the back of the book the author has included
an index of flowers and their meanings. 
I had so much fun reading about the flowers 
we are growing here in our yard and 
what they represent. 

This is what the flowers in our yard are saying:
alyssum-worth beyond beauty
allium-prosperity
cosmos-joy in love and life
crocus-youthful gladness
daffodil-new beginnings
daylily-coquetry
purple hyacinth-please forgive me
iris-message
lettuce-coldheartedness
lily-majesty
parsley-festivity
peppermint-warmth of feeling
peony-anger
petunia-your presence soothes me
orange rose-fascination
pale peach rose-modesty
pink rose-grace
red rose-love
sunflower-false riches
tulip-declaration of love
 and my favorite:
moss-maternal love
(because it grows with no roots)

Isn't it interesting?
I didn't realize we have so many different flowers
and plants growing in our yard until I started
analyzing what they all mean. We have even more
but I can't identify what they are at this point. 
If you want to know what your flowers and plants
are saying....check out this book. 

Total Pageviews