teaser tuesday picture Grab your current read.

Let the book fall open to a random page.

Share with us two (2) “teaser” sentences from that page, somewhere between lines 7 and 12.

You also need to share the title of the book that you’re getting your “teaser” from … that way people can have some great book recommendations if they like the teaser you’ve given!

Please avoid spoilers!

haunting bombay picture “Pinky threw herself against her grandmother, holding onto her tightly. ‘I don’t want to go back!  I don’t ever want to go back!’”

-Haunting Bombay by Shilpa Agarwal, p. 138

 

the maze runner picture The Maze Runner by James Dashner

Waking up suddenly in a moving metal box, Thomas has no clue to his identity – other than his name.  He has no clue who he is, where he is, or where he is going.  When the movement stops, he is greeted by a gaggle of teenage boys whose odd slang makes their speech barely intelligible.  Thomas still has no idea who or where he is, and these boys are of little help.  Eventually Thomas learns he has come to a place called The Glade, which is set in the middle of a Maze.  Each day the boys of The Glade go out into the maze to try to find a way out, while trying to avoid being stung by Grievers.  Upon Thomas’ arrival, though, odd things begin happening in The Glade.  At least one boy is sure that Thomas has come or been sent for nefarious purposes and it is up to him to prove that he is not there to cause problems, and that he can help the rest of them escape.

“The Maze Runner” is a bit difficult to get into at the beginning.  The Gladers use so much slang and refuse to give Thomas more information about what is going on right away that it is a bit difficult for the reader to pick up on what is happening right away.  After that it becomes a fairly interesting story.  I only say ‘fairly’ interesting because I really wanted to know more about why the boys are there, and what is happening in the outside world that it would be possible for them to be sent there in the first place.  Basically, I wanted a clearer picture of the world that Dashner creates.  This is good, because it means I’m intrigued enough in his story to care to know more, but bad because we are only allowed the tiniest peek in “The Maze Runner.”  “The Maze Runner” is the first book in a trilogy, and it does appear that in the second book at least we will go much deeper into the society and politics of what is happening.  The ending of “The Maze Runner” in particular got me VERY excited for the next book.

For me, “The Maze Runner” was a good but not great setup to what appears that it will be a fantastic trilogy.  I think it will gain a lot from the future books as I can look back and see how Dashner set things up.

I saw James Dashner in person!  See what he had to say!

Buy this book from:
Powells.
A local independent bookstore via Indiebound.
Amazon.

Thank you to Delacorte Press for sending me this copy to review.

 

tss picture Okay, so I had an AMAZING reading week.  I can’t show you book covers because I’m on my dad’s laptop at my parents’ condo and their internet keeps going in and out.  Instead, I’ll give you a title and author and a very brief thought to hold you over for my longer reviews.

Real Life & Liars by Kristina Riggle – Fantastic!  Loved it!
The Lost Symbol by Dan Brown – Dude’s just coasting now (review).
Right of Thirst by Frank Huyler – Well written, but I was hoping for more conflict.
Daughter of Kura by Debra Austen – Good writing and story, a bit disconcerting to read a story where the main characters are homo erectus, not homo sapien
Little Giant of Aberdeen County by Tiffany Baker – Both the story and the audio production were great
Saffron Dreams by Shaila Abdulla – Hopeful and real.

This week was also great because my parents came into town yesterday.  They stole Daniel and kicked us out to go on our second date sans bebe since he was born over 3 months ago.  We went to a nice Greek restaurant and then walked around Barnes and Nobles.  My husband even bought me two YA books: Dreaming Anastasia by Joy Preble and Liar by Justine Larbalestier.   How much better can a date get?!?

I won’t be around much today, because we’re off to take Daniel apple picking with his Nana and PaPa.

 

Let me just preface this entire post by saying that I’m stubborn.  Very stubborn.  I had impressed myself in August by somehow returning to my pre-baby reading levels of around 18-20 books per month, but I was fairly certain my reading levels were going to plummet in September when I would be returning to work part-time midway through the month.  But no, I’m too stubborn for that.  I was determined that I WOULD get my reading in whenever I could, so I did.  I actually read more books this month than I did any other month this year other than April, when I participated in the the Read-athon.  In fact, I’m pretty sure I read more pages than I have any other month this year.  Here are the stats: I read 21 books, of which 18 were paper format and totaled 6,902 pages.  Three of my books were audio books and I spent 1.4 days listening to audio books.

Oh, and did I mention that the last book I read in September brought me to my goal of 150 books for the year?!?  I was very excited about that, now I’m on track to read 200!  Of course, it was purely my stubbornness that made me finish that last book.  I stayed up late on the 30th to finish the book I was reading because it was a review book and I didn’t want it to count against me in the Clear Off Your Shelves Challenge.

After my list of what I read this month, you’ll find a list of the other reviews I posted this month:

What I Read:

Fiction
The Widow’s Season by Laura Brodie
The Marriage Bureau for Rich People by Farahad Zama
The Swan Thieves by Elizabeth Kostova
Crossing Washington Square by Joanne Rendell
City of Refuge by Tom Piazza
Real Life and Liars by Kristina Riggle – review pending
The Right of Thirst by Frank Huyler – review pending

Young Adult Fiction
Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins
Nothing But Ghosts by Beth Kephart
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets by J.K. Rowling (audio)
The Maze Runner by James Dashner – review coming October 5th
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban by J.K. Rowling (audio)

Historical Fiction
The Greatest Knight by Elizabeth Chadwick
The Tudor Rose by Margaret Campbell Barnes
The Queen’s Mistake by Diane Haeger – review coming October 6th, author guest post & giveaway October 7th

Mystery/Horror/Thriller
Posed for Murder by Meredith Cole – review pending
The Strain
by Guillermo del Toro (audio) – review pending
The Lost Symbol by Dan Brown

Nonfiction
The Mistress of the Vatican by Eleanor Herman
The Man Who Loved Books Too Much by Allison Hoover Bartlett
The Guinea Pig Diaries by A.J. Jacobs – review pending

Pick of the Month:

city of refuge picture

“City of Refuge” was just so powerful and so beautifully written.  Loved it.

What I Reviewed:

Fiction
Only Milo by Barry Smith
Her Fearful Symmetry by Audrey Niffenegger

Young Adult Fiction
Fragile Eternity by Melissa Marr
Forest of Hands and Teeth by Carrie Ryan

Historical Fiction
The King’s Confidante by Jean Plaidy
The White Queen by Philippa Gregory
God is an Englishman by R.F. Delderfield (book spotlight)

Nonfiction
Your Amazing Newborn by Marshall and Phyllis Klaus
Funny in Farsi by Firoozeh Dumas

 

library loot pictureLibrary Loot is a weekly event co-hosted by Eva and Marg that encourages bloggers to share the books they’ve checked out from the library.

Okay, I exercised some restraint at the library this week.  Actually, that’s not true.  I added 6 or 7 books, 2 audio books, and 3 seasons of a television series to my holds list.  However, not much came in from my holds list this week, so it appears that I’ve exercised restraint.

I checked out the audio books for “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince” and “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows”  for the Harry Potter Reading Challenge.  Now I’m really wishing I’d listened to the audio of the first book, because it appears I’m going to do the entire rest of the series on audio for this challenge.

Other than that, just one sad, lonely book (okay, not so lonely, because it is joining the nearly 20 other library books and hundreds of books I own on my shelves):strange case of hellish nell pictureThe Strange Case of Hellish Nell by Nine Shandler.  I thought this would be a good read later this month as it is the non-fiction account of a WWII-era witch trial.  I’m not positive where I saw this mentioned, I think somewhere on LibraryThing.

Did you get anything good from the library lately?

 

man who loved books too much picture The Man Who Loved Books Too Much: The True Story of a Thief, a Detective, and a World of Literary Obsession by Allison Hoover Bartlett

Some years ago Allison came into possession of a stolen rare book.  The brother of a friend left a note before his death that it belonged to a library but he’d never gotten around to returning it.  As she began researching the book in her possession, she inadvertently stumbled upon story after story of rare book theft.  She continued to be drawn in until she learned about Ken Sanders, the “bibliodick” (book detective), and John Gilkey, the book thief he had worked for years to catch.  “The Man Who Loved Books Too Much” is the story of Gilkey, and Sanders’ attempt to catch him.  Bartlett is able to interview Gilkey while he is in prison, and many more times after he is released.  He almost revels in telling her his story, sharing with her about the books he has loved.

Neither Sanders or Gilkey comes across as a very likable person.  Sanders is portrayed as both helpful and hard at times, chastising Bartlett for doing something he recommended she do in the first place.  As for Gilkey, he is charismatic in his own way, but clearly mentally ill.  His sense of entitlement is beyond belief and, for me, made his thefts all the more disturbing.  He seems to sincerely believe that he has a right to basically any rare book he wants and that if he cannot afford them, he is completely justified in stealing them.  Personally I’m just relieved that it is books he has focused on, or his crimes could be a lot scarier.

Before reading “The Man Who Loved Books Too Much” I hadn’t really ever given much thought to the world of rare books.  My husband likes to buy old books sometimes, but more because he thinks they look cool on our shelves and their contents are interesting than for any real urge towards collection.  I don’t personally quite understand the collector mindset.  Everytime I’ve tried to collect something in the past, I’ve gotten bored with it, and I don’t think of books as collectors’ items at all, I want to read them, even if it means they get beat up in my purse or have wet fingerprints on them from being read in the bathroom.   That being said, Bartlett really brought the world of rare book collecting to life.  I learned an incredible amount about a topic I’d never have thought to study otherwise.

Although at some points “The Man Who Loved Books Too Much” seemed to jump around or get a bit repetitive (which I think was partially caused by Gilkey being repetitive in his interviews), it was well-written overall and quite interesting.  I was actually very surprised what a quick read it was for what was essentially a very long nonfiction essay.  If you’re a booklover (and I’m guessing you are if you’re reading this), I’d recommend that you go ahead and give this a try, if for no other reason than to glimpse inside the world of rare books.

Buy this book from:
Powells.
A local independent bookstore via Indiebound.
Amazon.

Thank you to Lydia at Riverhead Books for sending me a copy of this book to review.

 

Winner: CherylS22

You may have noticed my review for the re-release of Margaret Campbell Barnes’ “The Tudor Rose” last week.Tudor Rose picture Thanks to the re-releases by Sourcebooks I’ve been enjoying Barnes’ writings.  If you like Plaidy, you’ll probably like Barnes too, she reminds me of Plaidy’s less-dry work.   Anyway, I really liked “The Tudor Rose.”  I like seeing Elizabeth of York get her time in the spotlight since her father, uncle, and second son tend to overshadow her.

Okay, but you’re really reading this post because you see the word ‘giveaway.’  Here’s the scoop, Sourcebooks will send a copy of “The Tudor Rose” to one of my readers in the US or Canada.  All you have to do is tell me in these comments who your favorite queen is and why.  Preferably British queen, but any queen will do.  If you comment on my review of “The Tudor Rose” (even if you did so before I announced this giveaway) I’ll give you an extra entry, but you aren’t entered if you don’t enter here.

I’ll close the giveaway at 11:59 pm Central on Tuesday, October 13th.

 

the lost symbol pictureThe Lost Symbol by Dan Brown

After “The Da Vinci Code’ came out I read all of Dan Brown’s work.  I enjoyed “Angels and Demons” and “Deception Point” was okay.  I thought “Digital Fortress” was pretty bad, though, and decided he must have peaked with “The Da Vinci Code.”

The release of “The Lost Symbol” really didn’t change my mind about Brown having peaked with “The Da Vinci Code.”  If you want to know what “The Lost Symbol” is about, take the plots of “Angels and Demons” and “The Da Vinci Code,” mix well, and replace Europe with DC and the Catholic Church with the Masons, let chill for 500 pages, and serve until guests are nauseated.

My real problem with “The Lost Symbol” is that it just didn’t seem half as interesting as “Angels and Demons” or “The Da Vinci” code.  Perhaps Brown dwelt too much on how the Masons are really just regular guys, to the point where I wasn’t interested in what Langdon would find if only he could decode their secrets.  This lack of interest made the things that annoy me about Dan Brown’s writing all the more glaring.  Oh, the italics!  They are everywhere!  And so annoying! And then, when you’re least expecting it, the worst possible thing happens….

A cliffhanger.  At least one in every chapter.  And chapters are only 3-4 pages long.  Since “The Lost Symbol” is over 500 pages, I would guess that there were at least 200 cliffhangers and, you know, having Brown attempt to manipulate me that often just got old really quickly.  Let me also say that the mention of Twitter near the end of the book seemed very silly and very much like Brown was trying to prove that he ‘gets’ the internet and social media.

The middle of this book is okay, but the beginning and end are pretty bleh.  I just couldn’t really care about what was happening.  If you’re in the mood for this kind of book, I’d recommend “Angels and Demons” or “The Da Vinci Code” before “The Lost Symbol.”  If you’ve already read those, branch out and try a new author of historical thrillers.  And if you have any suggestions, for better thrillers, please leave them in the comments.

If you absolutely must, buy this book from:
Powells.
A local independent bookstore via Indiebound.
Amazon.

© 2012 Devourer of Books Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha